A petition filed in the Lahore High Court is challenging the recent, sharp increase in tuition fees across private medical colleges, alleging that the hike lacks oversight and ignores the financial reality of middle-class families. The petitioner, a group of concerned parents and student representatives, argues that private institutions have increased annual charges by nearly 30% without justification.
They contend that the Pakistan Medical and Dental Council (PMDC) has effectively abandoned its regulatory role, leaving students at the mercy of private owners who treat education as a high-margin business.
For many families, this isn’t just an administrative grievance; it’s a barrier to entry. With annual fees now pushing past the 2.5 million rupee mark, the dream of a medical career is becoming a luxury reserved for the elite. The petition claims that colleges are bypassing the fee structures previously suggested by the regulatory body, capitalizing on the limited number of seats in public sector institutions.
“We aren’t asking for free education,” one parent told reporters outside the court. “We are asking for a cap that makes sense. Right now, these colleges are operating like corporate entities, not educational institutions.” The court is expected to issue notices to the provincial health department and the PMDC early next week.
Legal experts familiar with the case suggest the central issue hinges on whether the PMDC retains the legal teeth to enforce fee ceilings or if its authority has been eroded by recent legislative amendments. Private colleges, meanwhile, cite the rising costs of laboratory equipment, faculty salaries, and the overall inflationary pressure on the economy as the primary drivers for the hike.
They argue that maintaining international standards requires significant capital investment—costs they say they can no longer absorb. The LHC bench is likely to scrutinize the audit reports of these institutions to determine if the increased revenue is being funneled back into student facilities or if it’s simply boosting profit margins. Until the court intervenes, thousands of students are stuck in a precarious limbo.
They are currently facing the choice of paying the inflated rates or abandoning their academic path entirelyn a decision that will ripple through the country’s healthcare workforce for years to come.
