WBJEE 2025: All govt engineering seats filled in round one, says CM Adhikari
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
West Bengal Chief Minister Suvendu Adhikari on Wednesday, 9 July said that all seats in state-run engineering colleges had been filled in the very first round of West Bengal Joint Entrance Examination (WBJEE) counselling — a development he described as a clear sign of renewed student confidence in higher technical education within the state.
What the Numbers Signal
According to Chief Minister Adhikari, this is the first time in many years that government engineering college seats have been exhausted at the first-round counselling stage itself. He called it a matter of 'great pride and optimism', arguing the trend reflects a measurable shift in student preference back toward state institutions.
The development is notable against a backdrop of years of declining enrolment in West Bengal's public technical colleges, which critics had attributed to eroding academic standards and limited local employment prospects.
Reversing the Brain Drain
Adhikari, in a social media statement, reiterated his government's stated priority of arresting West Bengal's 'brain drain' — a phenomenon he described as having reached an 'alarming stage' in recent years. He attributed the outflow to two compounding factors: a deteriorating academic environment in state-run higher education institutions and a shortage of employment opportunities for graduates.
'We are taking proactive steps to modernise our institutions and foster an ecosystem of innovation and excellence. Our ultimate goal is to transform Brain Drain into Brain Gain by creating world-class opportunities right here at home,' Adhikari said in his statement.
Policy Shifts Under the New Government
The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led government's focus on reviving the state's academic ecosystem was underscored last month when it split the education portfolio — appointing separate ministers for school education and higher education. This marked a departure from the practice under the previous All India Trinamool Congress (TMC) regime, where a single minister oversaw the entire education department.
The move drew praise from several academicians and educationists, who said dedicated ministerial oversight could accelerate reforms in both segments.
What the Government Has Pledged
Adhikari said his administration is committed to elevating the quality of higher education statewide, with a focus on modernising institutions and building an innovation-friendly environment. The government's stated long-term aim is to ensure that talented youth from West Bengal can build careers without having to leave the state.
Whether the first-round seat-fill rate translates into sustained enrolment growth and improved placement outcomes will be the real measure of the policy shift — one that observers say will take at least a full academic cycle to assess.