This is the soft copy of my assignment, which has also been submitted in hard copy to the Department of English at MKBU, Bhavnagar.
Personal Information
Name : Makwana Bhargav ArvindbhaiRoll No : 01
Batch : M.A Sem 4 (2024-2026)Enro. No. : 5108240018Email : bhargavmakvana221@gmail.com
Assignment Details
Paper 207: Contemporary Literatures in English
Topic : Corruption and Commercialization of the Indian Education System in Revolution 2020 Subject Code:22414
Words: 3662Date of Submission : 31 March 2026
Table of Contents
Abstract
Introduction
Corruption in the Indian Education System
3.1 The Structural Roots of Corruption
3.2 The Collapse of Merit and QualificationCommercialization of Education Through Gopal
4.1 Ambition Shaped by Poverty
4.2 Education as a Business for Non-Academicians
4.3 The College as a Commercial Enterprise
4.4 The Myth of the Non-Profit Educational TrustThe Role of Politics and Money in Education
Corruption in Admissions, Hiring, and Placements
Real-Life Connections with the Indian Education System
Critical Analysis: Responsibility and Moral Complexity
Conclusion
10. References
1.Abstract
Chetan Bhagat's novel Revolution 2020 (2011) is a compelling social critique that goes far beyond a conventional love triangle. Set against the backdrop of Varanasi, one of India's most historically significant cities, the novel unfolds the systematic corruption and aggressive commercialization that have come to define modern Indian education. Through the character of Gopal Mishra — a young man from a financially struggling household — Bhagat exposes how educational institutions have abandoned their fundamental purpose of fostering knowledge and instead transformed into profit-driven enterprises governed by money and political manipulation. This assignment critically examines these themes using original textual evidence from the novel, supplemented by real-life parallels from the Indian educational landscape. It argues that the novel does not merely narrate a personal story but functions as a wider social commentary on a system that consistently fails its most vulnerable participants.
Keywords: Corruption, Commercialization, Indian Education System, Politics, Private Colleges, Gopal Mishra, Chetan Bhagat
2.Introduction
Chetan Bhagat is widely regarded as one of contemporary India's most influential popular authors, celebrated for his ability to translate complex social realities into accessible and emotionally resonant narratives. His novel Revolution 2020 is no exception. Published in 2011, the book carries a deceptively simple tagline:
"Love. Corruption. Ambition."(Bhagat)
This tagline is far more than a marketing device. It is, in essence, a precise summary of the novel's thematic architecture. The deliberate placement of 'corruption' alongside 'love' and 'ambition' signals that moral decay is not a peripheral subplot but a structural pillar of the narrative. From the very opening pages, Bhagat positions corruption as an inescapable force that shapes the destinies of his characters not because they are inherently flawed, but because the society and institutions surrounding them demand it.
The story traces the journey of Gopal Mishra from an ordinary schoolboy to the director of a private engineering college, Ganga Tech. This transformation, however, is not the triumphant arc of a deserving individual rising through merit. Rather, it is a deeply uncomfortable portrait of how ambition, when combined with a broken system, leads a person toward ethical compromise. As Bhagat writes, the novel narrates Gopal's story:
"from a 10-year school kid to a 26-year young director of Ganga Tech College."(Bhagat)
This rapid ascent is not a celebration of success but a damning indictment of the system that made it possible. Revolution 2020 must therefore be read not as a straightforward romance but as a social document — one that holds up a mirror to the failures of India's educational institutions and asks uncomfortable questions about collective responsibility.
3.Corruption in the Indian Education System
3.1 The Structural Roots of Corruption
Bhagat presents corruption in education not as an individual moral failing but as a deeply embedded structural problem. Gopal's story begins in poverty, and his early experiences vividly illustrate how socio-economic inequality shapes educational opportunities in India. His father, a man of modest means, dreams of giving his son a better life through education — yet the very institutions meant to enable that dream are riddled with dysfunction and financial barriers.
The commercialization of education begins even before a student reaches college — at the entrance examination coaching level, where coaching institutes operate as ruthless profit-making entities. Students are treated as financial assets or liabilities based on their academic potential. This transactional culture is explicit from the very first interaction Gopal has with the coaching industry. The application process itself is treated as a guaranteed revenue stream: as Gopal observes,
"Each institute asked for a thousand bucks for an application form. Whether they selected you or not, whether you joined or not, the fee had to be paid." (Bhagat )
This is not a deposit against admission — it is pure extraction. Furthermore, coaching institutes openly monetize examination rankings. When Gopal applies to Bansal classes, he is offered a discount exclusively based on his academic metrics, prompting the realization:
"I didn't realise my AIEEE rank could directly translate into money." (Bhagat)
Even the payment of coaching fees is framed in the language of commerce. When Gopal pays up, the accountant tells him matter-of-factly:
"This is the best investment you will make in your life." (Bhagat)
The language of investment, borrowed directly from commerce, is applied to what ought to be an intellectual pursuit. Students from wealthy families can afford repeated attempts at competitive examinations; those from poorer backgrounds cannot. This structural inequity forces individuals like Gopal into desperate choices, setting the stage for his eventual entry into a corrupt system.
3.2 The Collapse of Merit and Qualification
The most striking and unsettling articulation of corruption in the novel comes when Gopal, already established as the director of Ganga Tech, candidly admits his own educational limitations:
"Not just the youngest, but also the most uneducated director you've met." (Bhagat)
This line demands careful attention because it captures, in a single sentence, the complete inversion of educational values. A director of an academic institution is supposed to be a figure of intellectual authority — someone whose qualifications and scholarly achievements justify their leadership. Gopal, by contrast, openly acknowledges that he possesses neither. And yet he occupies this position of authority without embarrassment or guilt. The absence of shame here is as significant as the admission itself. It suggests that within the world of the novel — and by extension, within large sections of real-life Indian private education — the collapse of merit-based leadership is so normalized that it no longer shocks even those who embody it.
Bhagat is careful not to present this as merely Gopal's personal failing. The question the novel forces us to ask is: who allowed this to happen? The answer lies in the systemic corruption that Gopal participates in but did not single-handedly create. Educational institutions are approved, regulated, and monitored by government bodies — and yet Gopal's college operates and flourishes. This implies that corruption extends well beyond one individual; it permeates inspectors, regulators, and politicians alike.
4.Commercialization of Education Through Gopal
4.1 Ambition Shaped by Poverty
To understand the commercialization of education in the novel, one must first understand the psychology of its central character. Gopal's attitude toward money is established early:
"A rich man, I said." (Bhagat)
Unlike protagonists who dream of becoming engineers, doctors, or teachers, Gopal's aspiration is purely financial. This is not presented by Bhagat as selfishness; rather, it is offered as an honest reflection of what poverty does to a young person's imagination. When survival is a daily challenge, idealism is a luxury. Gopal's early fixation on wealth is therefore not a character flaw but a symptom of a society that has taught its most disadvantaged members that money is the only meaningful measure of success.
This childhood ambition directly informs Gopal's later decisions. Education, for him, is not an end in itself but a pathway to financial security. When the legitimate pathways — entrance examinations, merit-based admissions — fail him, he does not abandon his ambition. Instead, he redirects it toward a system that rewards not knowledge but capital.
4.2 Education as a Business for Non-Academicians
The narrative highlights how the private engineering college sector has been overrun by businessmen and politicians seeking profits and social prestige, rather than academicians focused on student welfare. This reality is captured vividly in two conversations. When Gopal enquires about who actually opens private colleges in India, his friend Sunil responds with blunt directness:
"Yeah, politicians, builders, beedi-makers. Anybody with experience in a shady business does really well in education."(Bhagat)
This observation is corroborated by Gopal's fellow student Vineet, who explains that his own institution is called:
"Riddhi Siddhi Technical College. The owners have a sari business with the same name." (Bhagat)
Similarly, the Verma family who run Sri Ganesh College are described as being people who are into country liquor and have now opened a college. Education, in this world, is simply another industry for those who already have capital, regardless of whether they have any interest in learning.
This dismissal of academic purpose reaches its most explicit form when Sunil, at an education fair, evaluates a college brochure with cold financial logic rather than any consideration of learning outcomes:
"Fuck learning... See, tuition fifty thousand, hostel thirty thousand... Average placement is one and a half lakhs. Fuck it. Let's go." (Bhagat)
The crude language here is deliberate on Bhagat's part — it strips away any remaining pretense. The worth of an institution is calculated entirely through a financial equation: fees paid versus salary earned. Learning itself is openly dismissed as irrelevant.
4.3 The College as a Commercial Enterprise
The full expression of Gopal's commercialized approach to education is revealed when he describes his college's financial performance:
"Sixteen hundred students now… Each paying one lakh a year… We already have a sixteen-crore turnover." (Bhagat)
This passage is remarkable for its language as much as its content. Gopal does not speak in the vocabulary of education — he speaks in the vocabulary of business. Words like 'turnover' are drawn from commerce and finance, not from pedagogy. Students are not described as learners or individuals with intellectual potential; they are units of revenue. The calculation is chillingly precise: 1600 students × ₹1 lakh = ₹16 crores. Education has been reduced to an arithmetic equation.Gopal elaborates his philosophy further:
"Life is to be enjoyed. Look at me, I will make four crores this year." (Bhagat)
This statement encapsulates the complete transformation of education from a vocation into an industry. The phrase 'life is to be enjoyed' reflects a philosophy of hedonistic materialism — one in which professional roles exist not to serve society but to enrich the individual. For Gopal, running a college is no different from running any other profitable business. Quality, ethics, and student welfare are irrelevant variables in this equation. What matters is the annual income it generates.
4.4 The Myth of the Non-Profit Educational Trust
Indian law dictates that educational institutions must be run by non-profit trusts, but in the novel this legal framework is openly acknowledged as a fiction. When Gopal asks how private operators extract profit if the institution is technically non-profit, the education consultant Mr. Bedi explains the mechanism with matter-of-fact clarity:
"Every college must be incorporated as a non-profit trust. There are no shareholders, only trustees... Well, you take a profit. The trustees can take out cash from the trust, showing it as an expense. Or take some fee in cash, and not account for it." (Bhagat)
This explanation presents systematic financial fraud not as a scandal but as standard operating procedure. It reflects a broader reality in Indian private education where the legal requirement of non-profit status is routinely bypassed through creative accounting and unaccounted cash transactions.
5. The Role of Politics and Money in Education
Corruption in education is not a standalone phenomenon — it is inseparable from political power. Gopal's ability to establish and operate Ganga Tech College is entirely dependent on his relationship with MLA Shukla-ji. The nature of this arrangement is made explicit when Shukla-ji lays out the terms:
"We will help each other. I need money for the elections, you need approvals for the college."(Bhagat)
This single exchange reveals the entire architecture of corruption. Educational approvals — which are supposed to be granted on the basis of infrastructure standards and academic readiness — are openly traded as political currency. Through Shukla-ji's patronage, Gopal is able to secure land, obtain official approvals, and navigate regulatory inspections that are supposed to ensure quality. None of these advantages are earned through merit; they are purchased through political access.
The extent of the financial corruption required to establish the college is documented with remarkable precision by Gopal himself:
"I knew the exact amount of bribes it took to reach this day. Seventy-two lakhs, twenty-three thousand and four hundred rupees to obtain everything from electricity connections to construction site labour approvals." (Bhagat)
The specificity of this figure is striking. Gopal does not speak of corruption vaguely or regretfully — he accounts for it the way a careful businessman accounts for operating expenses. Bribery has been normalized into the cost of doing business.
This normalization extends to the regulatory bodies meant to ensure educational standards. The AICTE and UGC inspectors, far from being independent watchdogs, are systematically bought off. As Mr. Bedi explains the inspection process:
"A thick packet to every inspector... right now we pay to obtain an inspection date... any government work, especially in education, requires a fee." (Bhagat)
For the final AICTE inspection, cash envelopes are distributed according to seniority: two lakhs for one inspector, twenty-five lakhs each for others, and fifty lakhs for the most senior member. In one of the novel's most disturbing passages, Gopal even arranges the services of call girls as a bribe to secure an inspector's approval — corruption that has descended from the financial into the deeply personal and exploitative.
In the novel, Varanasi itself — a city historically associated with learning, philosophy, and spiritual wisdom — becomes the ironic setting for this corruption. The contrast between Varanasi's reputation as a center of knowledge and its actual portrayal as a hub of educational corruption is one of Bhagat's most pointed social observations. As Raghav's newspaper pointedly asks about Shukla-ji's investment in Ganga Tech:
"Is this college an attempt to clean up his reputation? People come to the Ganga to clean their sins. Is Shukla trying to clean away his sins against Ganga?" (Bhagat)
This rhetorical question draws a devastating parallel: just as Ganga is exploited by Shukla-ji in the Action Plan scandal, so too is the institution of education exploited to launder both money and reputation.
6.Corruption in Admissions, Hiring, and Placements
Even the day-to-day operations of Ganga Tech are depicted as entirely transactional. To fill seats, Gopal's team secretly pays off school principals and coaching class organisers to direct students toward their institution. Bedi explicitly states:
"We give them ten per cent of the fee we take for every admission... We give ten per cent to anyone — coaching classes, career fair organisers or whoever helps us fill up the college." (Bhagat)
Admissions, in this system, are not a matter of merit or aptitude but of commercial incentives flowing through a network of middlemen. The faculty hired to give the institution a veneer of academic legitimacy are similarly compromised. The Dean they appoint demands a salary paid primarily in cash — one lakh in cash and seventy thousand by cheque each month — and openly admits that his physical presence on campus will be minimal:
"Which faculty goes to teach every day in private colleges? Don't worry, I will tell the AICTE inspectors I am there every day." (Bhagat)
The Dean's honesty about his absenteeism is another moment where the novel's most unsettling quality emerges: the characters are not hiding their corruption from each other. They are simply conducting business as everyone in their world understands it to function.
Even student placements — the ultimate output by which private colleges justify their existence — are tainted. When Gopal and his placement coordinator Jayant discuss how to secure jobs for students, the complicity of the corporate world is revealed:
"'HR managers want a cut if they hire from our colleges, correct?' I said. 'Right, sir,' Jayant said." (Bhagat)
This exchange closes the circle of corruption: from the coaching centre that treats rankings as revenue, through the college that treats students as turnover, to the corporate recruiter who takes a personal cut for offering employment. No stage in the educational journey remains untouched.
7. Real-Life Connections with the Indian Education System
The power of Revolution 2020 as a social critique lies in the degree to which its fictional scenarios mirror documented realities. Stephen P. Heyneman defines educational corruption as extending beyond mere material gain to encompass the abuse of authority for personal advantage — a definition that precisely describes the world Bhagat constructs. Crucially, Heyneman argues that when the public comes to believe that an education system is corrupt, the consequences extend beyond economic damage: the entire basis of a nation's social cohesion is placed at risk. Revolution 2020 dramatizes exactly this erosion of public trust.
Heyneman's analysis of corrupted accreditation systems is particularly illuminating when read alongside Bhagat's novel. He observes that in many countries, private institutions seeking official recognition are compelled to pay bribes to obtain it — a systemic condition in which regulatory bodies, far from protecting academic standards, have become instruments of extraction. This is precisely what Bhagat depicts through the AICTE and UGC inspection scenes, where envelopes of cash determine whether a college receives approval. Heyneman further notes that as faculty salaries decline and institutions seek alternative income sources, bribery in the admissions process can become normalized to the point where candidates may know in advance what a 'pass' will cost them. The coaching industry portrayed in Revolution 2020 — where a student's examination rank translates directly into monetary discounts — reflects this same collapse of merit as the governing principle of educational access.
The most vivid and recent real-life illustration of Bhagat's themes, however, is not drawn from the era of the novel but from February 2026, when Galgotias University — a large private institution in Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh — was expelled from India's national AI Impact Summit in New Delhi. The reason was that a university faculty member had presented a commercially available robotic dog, manufactured by a Chinese company and widely sold internationally, as an innovation developed by the university's own Centre of Excellence. When social media users identified the robot and the misrepresentation became public, the university was asked to leave the summit on grounds that misinformation could not be endorsed at a national showcase. The institution's subsequent response — marked by contradictory statements, deflection of blame onto individual faculty, and attempts to reframe the episode as a matter of perspective — was itself a demonstration of institutional opacity.
Critics and academic commentators described the robot incident not as an isolated lapse but as symptomatic of a deeper structural problem — the prioritization of spectacle, branding, and political alignment over genuine academic substance. One commentator coined the phrase 'Galgotias Syndrome' to describe this broader pattern visible across Indian private higher education: the substitution of image for substance, and the rebranding of imported or borrowed material as indigenous achievement.
The tragic figure of Manoj Dutta in the novel — a young man at Kota who takes his own life under the pressure of examination failure — finds its real-world counterpart in documented mental health crises among students in competitive coaching environments. The pressure that Gopal experiences at Kota, watching peers succeed while his own resources run out, captures a structural reality that no regulatory reform has yet adequately addressed. Heyneman's observation that selection systems riddled with bribery place a nation's economic and social ambitions at risk acquires particular urgency in the Indian context, where millions of families invest their savings in educational pathways that the system itself has corrupted.
8.Critical Analysis: Responsibility and Moral Complexity
One of the most sophisticated aspects of Revolution 2020 is its refusal to assign blame simplistically. Gopal is neither a pure villain nor an innocent victim — he occupies the morally complex space in between. On one hand, he is genuinely disadvantaged: he comes from poverty, faces an unfair system, and lacks the social capital that allows others to succeed legitimately. On the other hand, once the opportunity for corruption presents itself, he embraces it fully and consciously.
The contrast between Gopal and Raghav is central to this moral architecture. Raghav's commitment to principled journalism is captured in his declaration:
"I want to change this country. Not make money from it."
His path is harder and far less financially rewarding than Gopal's, but it retains its ethical integrity. Through this contrast, Bhagat suggests that individuals always retain some degree of choice — even within unjust systems — but he also acknowledges that the cost of ethical choice is often disproportionately high for those who are already disadvantaged.
Gopal's own self-awareness makes this moral complexity all the more striking. He is not deluded about what he has become:
"I am not a good person, Aarti. I know that. But in this world, only bad people seem to get ahead."
Bhagat does not allow readers the comfort of dismissing Gopal as simply 'bad.' Instead, the novel forces us to confront how ordinary people are shaped by and complicit in corrupt systems. The novel also implicates society at large: the demand for prestigious degrees and high-paying careers — driven by parents, communities, and economic imperatives — creates a market for exactly the kind of institutions Gopal runs. As long as the value of education is measured by the salary it commands rather than the knowledge it imparts, there will be a market for credentials sold without genuine learning.
9.Conclusion
Revolution 2020 is not a story about exceptional villainy — it is a story about ordinary compromise in an extraordinary broken system. Through Gopal's journey from a desperate student to an 'uneducated director' running a sixteen-crore business disguised as a college, Bhagat makes one argument with unmistakable clarity: corruption and commercialization are not failures of the Indian education system. They are the system.
Every voice in the novel speaks the same language — transaction. The coaching accountant calls fees an investment. The consultant explains how to extract black money through a non-profit trust. The placement coordinator confirms that HR managers take personal cuts. No character is shocked. No character protests. That collective silence is Bhagat's sharpest indictment.
Heyneman warns that once the public believes its education system is corrupt, a nation's social cohesion begins to collapse. Revolution 2020 shows us exactly how that collapse happens — not through dramatic scandal, but through the quiet daily choices of people who have simply stopped expecting anything better.
Reform, the novel implies, demands more than new policies or stricter inspectors. It demands a society willing to measure education by what students learn, not by what their degree earns. Until that shift occurs, Ganga Tech College will keep filling its sixteen hundred seats — and the ideals education is supposed to serve will remain, like Gopal himself, deeply compromised.
10. References
Apoorvanand. “Galgotias Robot Row Exposes Modi-Era Spectacle Politics.” Frontline, 22 Feb. 2026, frontline.thehindu.com/news/galgotias-robot-controversy-politics/article70662774.ece.
Bhagat, Chetan. Revolution Twenty20 : Love . Corruption. Ambition. Rupa, 2014.
Heyneman, Stephen P. "Education and corruption." International Journal of Educational Development 24.6 (2004): 637-648.
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