Meghalaya jumps two PGI grades in 2025-26, exits lowest education band
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Meghalaya has climbed two grades in the Union government's Performance Grading Index (PGI) 2.0 for 2025-26, moving out of the lowest performance band for the first time since the index was introduced, state Education Minister Lahkmen Rymbui announced on Wednesday, 8 July. The state's overall PGI score rose from 448 in 2024-25 to 525.7 in 2025-26, propelling it from the Akanshi-3 category to Akanshi-1 in a single assessment cycle.
A Historic First for Meghalaya
According to Minister Rymbui, this is the first time Meghalaya has exited the Akanshi-3 band — the lowest performance tier under the PGI framework — since the Centre introduced the index. The jump of two full grades within one cycle is being viewed as an unusually sharp upward move for a northeastern state that has historically struggled with school education metrics.
The improvement is also part of a consistent upward trajectory over four consecutive assessment cycles. The state's PGI score has risen from 401.62 in 2022-23, to 417.90 in 2023-24, to 448 in 2024-25, and now to 525.7 in 2025-26 — a cumulative gain of more than 124 points over four years.
Key Reforms Behind the Improvement
Rymbui attributed the gains to a cluster of structural reforms rolled out over the past few years. These include the introduction of the Structured Pay Framework (SPF) for teachers, rationalisation of schools, and the implementation of the Chief Minister's IMPACT programme. Infrastructure upgrades under the Samagra Shiksha scheme and an Asian Development Bank-supported education project have also contributed to the score.
On the governance and capacity side, the state has invested in digital education administration and strengthened teacher training through the Meghalaya Teacher Training Academy. Targeted interventions in foundational literacy and numeracy have been a specific focus area, the minister said.
What the Score Reflects
The PGI 2.0 framework, administered by the Centre, grades states across domains including learning outcomes, access, infrastructure, governance, and teacher effectiveness. A move from Akanshi-3 to Akanshi-1 signals measurable progress across multiple parameters simultaneously — not just a single metric improvement.
Rymbui credited the achievement to a collective effort involving teachers, education officials, school management committees, and other stakeholders across the state. He described the milestone as significant but cautioned that the government views it as a waypoint rather than a destination.
What the Government Has Pledged Next
The Education Minister reaffirmed the state government's commitment to further improving learning outcomes, strengthening governance structures, enhancing teacher capacity, and ensuring access to quality education for every child in Meghalaya. No specific new programmes were announced alongside the PGI disclosure, but officials indicated that ongoing reform initiatives will be deepened in the coming academic year.