The District Education Revitalisation Programme was launched in 1994 with an purpose to universalise primary education in India by reforming and vitalising the prevailing main education system. 85% of the DERP was funded by the central authorities and the remaining 15% was funded by the states. The DERP, which had opened 160,000 new schools together with eighty four,000 various education faculties delivering various education to roughly 3.5 million youngsters, was additionally supported by UNICEF and other international packages. “Corruption hurts the poor disproportionately – by diverting funds intended for growth, undermining a government’s capacity to offer primary companies, feeding inequality…