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India's Student Suicide Crisis: System Failure Exposed
20 Dec
Summary
- Student suicides in India rose 65% between 2013 and 2023.
- Only 1% of India's health budget supports mental health services.
- Education system prioritizes degrees over student resilience.

Student suicides across India have escalated dramatically, with a 65% increase observed between 2013 and 2023. This alarming trend is no longer localized, with incidents reported nationwide, affecting students from medical colleges to primary school levels. Experts point to systemic failures within an education system designed to produce high scores rather than resilient individuals capable of managing emotional challenges and setbacks.
Despite acknowledging the economic returns of social-emotional learning, India's investment in mental health remains critically low, constituting just over 1% of the health budget and a fraction of the total Union government budget. The country faces a severe deficit in mental health professionals, significantly below WHO recommendations. Current initiatives, while growing, struggle with implementation, resource gaps, and inconsistent follow-up, highlighting the need for a national priority shift.
Addressing this crisis requires recognizing student suicides as a system failure, not individual inability. This entails integrating resilience building from preschool, enhancing teacher and parent capacity in child psychology and mental health support, and incorporating well-being indicators into school evaluations. Ultimately, education must prepare students for life's demands, fostering adaptability and emotional literacy beyond exam performance.


