What 'Financialisation' Actually Means
In simple terms, financialisation is the process of turning something into a financial product that can be bought and sold for profit. For decades, Indian law has required schools to operate as non-profit trusts or societies. Education was treated as a charitable
act, not a business. But a new trend is seeing schools treated as an 'asset class', much like real estate or stocks. Investors are drawn to the sector for its predictable cash flows and long-term demand, seeing a student's 12-year journey as a high-value investment. This transforms education from a social good into a commercial venture where financial returns become a primary goal.
The New Players: Private Equity Firms
The main drivers of this trend are private equity (PE) firms—large investment funds that pool money to acquire companies. After a lull during the pandemic, these firms are aggressively investing in the Indian K-12 space. Big names like KKR, Blackstone, and ChrysCapital are pouring crores into school chains and the companies that service them. Legally, they cannot invest directly in the non-profit school trusts. Instead, they use a workaround: they acquire for-profit companies that control everything around the school—the land and buildings, management services, technology platforms, curriculum licensing, and even transport. The school trust then pays fees for these services, allowing investors to legally extract profits from school operations.
The Direct Impact on Your Wallet
When the primary goal shifts to maximizing investor returns, the pressure on school finances intensifies. This often translates directly into higher costs for parents. The relentless fee hikes, which can consume a significant portion of a family's income, are a clear symptom. Beyond tuition, schools may introduce or increase charges for a host of 'ancillary services'—from mandatory transport and branded uniforms to expensive technology platforms and extracurricular activities. This model is especially prevalent in schools offering international curricula like the IB or Cambridge boards, where fee caps are less stringent, allowing more room for profit generation. The result is that quality education becomes increasingly unaffordable, deepening social inequalities.
How Profit-Seeking Affects the Classroom
The focus on profitability doesn't just affect fees; it can change the entire educational environment. To improve margins, school chains may centralise operations and standardise everything from curriculum to teaching methods. While this creates efficiencies of scale for investors, it can stifle the unique ethos of a school. Cost-cutting measures can lead to lower teacher salaries, reduced investment in professional development, and higher staff turnover. Some reports indicate that while visually impressive upgrades are made, less visible but crucial investments in things like teacher training or bus maintenance may be neglected. The priority can shift from holistic child development to metrics that look good on a balance sheet, potentially compromising the very quality of education that parents are paying a premium for.
What Parents Can Do
While this trend can seem overwhelming, informed parents are not powerless. It begins with asking the right questions before and after admission. Enquire about the ownership structure of the school. Is it run by an educational trust or managed by a larger corporate entity? Look closely at the fee structure—what is included, what is extra, and how much have fees increased over the past few years? Scrutinize the school's stated priorities. Do they align with a child-centric educational philosophy, or do they feel more like a marketing pitch? Engage with the parent-teacher association and other parents to understand the real classroom experience. Staying vigilant and engaged is the most effective way to ensure that your child’s school prioritises learning over profit.
















