Supreme Court To Examine NEET-PG 2025 Cut-Off Reduction: The NEET PG 2025 cut-off reduction for MD/MS/MDS course admissions is now under the Supreme Court's scanner. The court is deeply investigating the reasons behind this significant drop in qualifying percentile. Key concerns include its potential impact on NEET PG entrance quality and the maintenance of postgraduate medical education standards. This crucial case involves both the National Board of Examinations in Medical Sciences (NBEMS) and the Central government.
The Supreme Court is closely examining the sharp reduction in the NEET PG 2025 qualifying percentile. This judicial review aims to understand the implications of such a change.
The court is specifically inquiring:
How the cutoff reduction might influence the overall quality of the NEET PG entrance.
Whether postgraduate medical education standards will be maintained.
The Centre presented its arguments to the Supreme Court regarding the decision to lower the NEET PG cutoff. The government highlights several key points.
The Centre asserts that:
Education quality will not be compromised, as all candidates hold valid MBBS degrees.
These licensed professionals will not dilute educational standards.
After Round-2 counselling, 9,621 out of 31,742 All India Quota (AIQ) seats remained vacant.
Lowering the cutoff made 1,00,054 additional candidates eligible for Round-3.
The reduction aims to prevent wastage of PG medical seats and bolster healthcare.
A critical concern involves the substantial fee differences between government and private colleges for PG-level medical courses. This disparity creates a significant barrier. Here is a comparison of admission fees:
|
Issues with Private Colleges and Fee Violations |
|
|---|---|
|
Particulars |
Details |
|
Government College Fee Range |
INR 8,000 to INR 30,000 |
|
Private College Admission Fees |
INR 95 lakhs and INR 1.5 crores |
This vast difference restricts admission for many who cannot afford high private institution fees. The National Medical Commission (NMC) directed private colleges to cap fees at 50% of government college rates. This suggests potential violations of admission fee capping rules, contributing to the controversy of reducing cutoffs.