Andhra CM supports PPP model for setting up new medical colleges
Press Trust of India | December 17, 2025 | 03:12 PM IST | 2 mins read
The Chief Minister defended plans to develop 10 of the 17 Centre-sanctioned medical colleges under the PPP model, opposed by the YSRCP.
Amaravati: Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N Chandrababu Naidu on Wednesday defended the decision to develop medical colleges under the Public Private Partnership mode, saying it will ensure efficient services. Speaking at the fifth collectors conference at the secretariat here, the Chief Minister addressed the politically sensitive issue of developing 10 medical colleges under the PPP model, a move vehemently opposed by the YS Jagan Mohan Reddy-led YSRCP.
According to the government, these 10 medical colleges were part of the 17 colleges sanctioned during the previous YSRCP government by the Centre. “Services will be better through the PPP mode. Some people say that medical colleges are being privatised.
Though they are being built through the PPP mode, they will operate as government colleges,” said Naidu. Asserting that rules for the medical colleges will be set by the government, the CM said 70 per cent of their services will be extended to the NTR Vaidya Seva scheme (welfare health scheme), and that medical seats were also increased.
Noting that the Centre is also taking up projects under the PPP mode, Naidu said he is not afraid of criticism and that the truth must be told to people. Hitting out at YSRCP, the CM said Rs 500 crore was spent on the ‘Rushikonda Palace’ in Vizag during the previous YSRCP government, which otherwise could have funded two medical colleges .
“The past government (YSRCP) had made several mistakes. It was not even in a position to pay salaries and availed loans at the highest interest rates. It created problems by availing debt at 13 to 14 per cent (interest rate),” Naidu said while addressing the collectors of 26 districts.
Further, the CM issued a warning to officials regarding bureaucratic inefficiency, particularly in the Revenue Department. "Identifying the loopholes in the system and making use of them gave rise to a situation where work is being forsaken. This scourge is the highest in the Revenue Department," he said.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Quick Watch
]Next Story
]Featured News
]- NEET Exam: Why more women qualify, top the lists, but still can't make it to AIIMS
- Anna University students piece together BTech courses as faculty gaps lead to fragmented teaching
- NCERT teaching shame, not respect; blurring of Mohenjo-daro ‘Dancing Girl’ in book draws criticism
- NTA must publish ‘implementation roadmap’ for reforms recommended by HLCE: Parliament panel
- ‘Major financial project’: Tamil Nadu parents say private school fee disclosure rule will help plan education
- From farm work at 10 to Padma Shri at 70: Mahendra Nath Roy’s journey to become world’s top 2% scientist
- Across universities, 4th year of NEP’s FYUP more about confusion than research or practical training
- IITs will test new JEE Advanced format on first-year BTech students this year: IIT Kanpur director
- Delhi Govt school alumnus builds learning, skill development platform; reaches 5,000 underserved students
- ‘BTech Not Enough’: Outdated engineering curriculum leaves students paying to bridge classroom-to-career gap