By Sahin Akhter
The cool, winding streets of Shillong, a city long celebrated as an educational hub in Northeast India, now echo with a painful contradiction. It’s a dissonance I encountered firsthand recently, not in a lecture hall, but astride the back of a Rapido bike-taxi. My driver, a young man with a polite, measured demeanor, was navigating the city traffic while silently navigating a far more complex professional gridlock: the widening chasm between an advanced academic degree and access to a meaningful, high-value career.
The driver, who requested anonymity to avoid the social weight of underemployment, holds a Master’s degree in Mathematics. Let that sink in: a postgraduate qualification in a highly analytical field. Yet, like an alarming number of his highly-educated peers across the region, he finds his current occupation in the gig economy of bike taxis—a temporary financial buffer driven less by choice and more by the sheer absence of professional direction.
The conversation, initially focused on the quickest route, quickly pivoted to the most frustrating one: the path after graduation.
“We Don’t Know What to Do After That”
“Yeah, but see, we study, but we’re not doing anything, you know? We don’t know what to do after that,” the 25-year-old math graduate articulated, expressing a widespread, paralyzing uncertainty.
This isn’t a deficit of academic ability; Shillong’s institutions successfully produce graduates qualified for advanced study. The core problem, as our ride revealed, is a catastrophic systemic failing in career counseling. The educational system equips students for the next level of academia but utterly fails to provide a viable roadmap for the corporate sector, competitive national exams, or high-earning professional fields. The default is often a low-paying, secure government job—or, increasingly, no path at all.
For this young man, the Rapido service, a relatively new presence in Shillong, has become an essential economic safety net. On a good day, it allows him to earn up to ₹1,800, providing immediate solvency where his Master’s degree currently provides none.
The Information Gap: Pathways Unknown
This absence of actionable guidance ensures that the region’s considerable intellectual investment fizzles out into economic stagnation, turning postgraduate degrees into expensive certificates of frustration.
Financially rewarding opportunities are being missed not because of a lack of talent, but because critical, practical information rarely reaches the student community. Pathways into high-placement institutes, strategies for tackling competitive national exams, and the simple mechanics of corporate sector hiring remain largely unknown. These are bright, English-speaking graduates who possess a distinct and valuable advantage in the national corporate market, yet are being prevented from accessing futures that would substantially improve their financial security.
The Cultural Calculus of Opportunity
A stark cultural choice further compounds the dilemma for educated Northeastern youth: remain close to home for the comfort and safety of community, accepting limited financial growth, or relocate to the mainland for better pay and face the very real risk of racial prejudice.
The driver, who admitted he has never travelled outside the region, confirmed that the fear of discrimination often outweighs the pursuit of higher-paying jobs. It is a heartbreaking calculus where financial ambition is shelved in favor of cultural safety.
The story of this educated young Rapido driver is more than a single anecdote; it is an urgent plea echoing across the region’s institutions. High-quality academic education—the very thing Shillong prides itself on—must be paired with high-quality, actionable career guidance. This integration is no longer a luxury; it is essential to stop the devastating waste of human capital and ensure that the region’s talented youth can finally realize the opportunities they have worked so tirelessly to earn.


























