The recent leak of examination papers in India has dominated headlines, but the structural crisis affecting national examination boards extends far beyond one country's borders. Across the globe, from the UK's Ofqual to the US-based College Board, the same systemic failures persist: outdated security protocols, privatisation of oversight, and a relentless pressure to digitise without adequate safeguards.
Take the UK. In 2023, the Joint Council for Qualifications (JCQ) reported a 20% increase in malpractice allegations compared to pre-pandemic levels. Yet, the true scale of the problem remains hidden because JCQ relies on self-reporting by schools. A former senior examiner told The British Wire: “The system is designed to protect the brand, not the integrity of the exam.” The brand in question is the exam board itself, each a private entity competing for market share. AQA, Edexcel, OCR: they are businesses first, guardians of academic standards second.
The privatisation of examination boards is a global phenomenon. In India, the National Testing Agency (NTA) outsources question paper printing to private vendors. The 2024 leak was not an aberration but a symptom of cost-cutting that prioritises profit over security. In the US, the College Board’s Advanced Placement (AP) exams are administered by a non-profit that acts like a for-profit: $98 per test, with CEO David Coleman earning over $1.5 million annually. In 2022, a security breach saw AP exam questions posted online hours before the test. The response? A terse statement about “isolated incidents.”
But the crisis is not just about leaks. It is about what happens when exam boards fail to adapt to a digital world. Online proctoring, widely adopted during COVID-19, is riddled with false positives and privacy violations. In Australia, the Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority (VCAA) scrapped online exams after a 2023 pilot revealed that 30% of students faced technical glitches. Yet, the push for digital exams continues, driven by cost savings. A JCQ insider confided: “Online exams are inevitable. They’re cheaper. But no one is talking about the fact that we’re creating a two-tier system: the haves with reliable internet and the have-nots.”
The hidden cost is borne by students. In regions from Delhi to Detroit, exam boards are gatekeepers to university admissions and employment. When the system fails, it is not just a grade at stake: it is years of preparation. The UK’s Equality and Human Rights Commission found that malpractice penalties disproportionately affect students from disadvantaged backgrounds. In India, the NTA’s cancellation of exams due to leaks leaves millions in limbo, some contemplating self-harm. The psychological toll is uncounted.
Structural reform remains elusive. In 2022, a UK parliamentary committee recommended a single regulator for all exam boards, but the Department for Education rejected it, citing “market competition.” In India, a parliamentary panel urged improved vetting of vendors. The NTA responded by hiring more temporary staff. The British Wire spoke to a former NTA data security analyst who said: “They treat cybersecurity like a check-box. No one in leadership has a technical background. It’s a disaster waiting to happen.”
And yet, the silence is deafening. Media coverage focuses on the drama of the leak: the arrests, the apology, the rescheduled exam. The deeper question of why these boards are structurally vulnerable goes unasked. The answer is uncomfortable: examination boards have become too big to function transparently. Their revenue depends on volume: more test-takers, more income. Security and quality are secondary costs.
A 2023 study by the OECD found that exam boards in high-stakes testing countries spend less than 5% of their budget on security. Meanwhile, they invest heavily in marketing. The College Board spends millions on lobbying and advertising. Ofqual’s budget has been cut by 40% since 2010. The result is a system that is brittle, reactive, and unable to anticipate crises.
As one former Ofqual board member put it: “We are living on borrowed time. The next leak will be bigger, and it will happen because the structure is rotten. No one wants to fix it because fixing it means admitting the model is broken.”








