Wednesday 25 September 2013

Indians, Chinese keep US B-schools in business

MUMBAI: Young graduates from India and China are powering the growth of full-time MBA programmes worldwide. In contrast, the share of working people planning to pursue an MBA—through online, executive or part-time mode—is plummeting.

These trends emerged in the latest survey of 328 graduate B-schools in 42 countries by Graduate Management Admission Council (GMAC), which conducts the GMAT. It shows 31% MBA programmes worldwide received the second largest number of applications from India. Business schools in the US have gained, while those in the Asia-Pacific have witnessed a decline.

US B-schools continue to be popular destinations for aspirants from China and India and the overall growth is largely driven by male candidates.

"There was a noticeable increase in programmes where India was the greatest source of talent (24% programmes) compared to last year's survey results (14%)," said Michelle Sparkman Renz, director of research communications for GMAC.

Globally, the full-time two-year MBA received about 4.1 applications for each available spot, whereas the full-time one-year programme had around 2.7 candidates vying for every seat.

"In 2008 and 2009, early in the Great Recession, there was impressive growth in the share of full-time MBA programmes showing application increases," said Lawrence Rudner, GMAC vice-president, research and development. "In 2010 and 2011, there was a decline, but full-time programmes began to rebound in 2012 and look sturdier today."

Of all forms, executive MBA—which promises a climb up the corporate ladder—had the most dismal year, with every second college reporting a fall in the application count. The uncertainty of the times, increasing work demands, depleting savings and fears of the next round of layoffs—all dictated this fall.

The latest GMAC survey, released globally on Tuesday, revealed that fewer professionals wanted to invest time and energy in further education.

A fall in international students once again kept the growth of European business schools lean, with just 38% of full-time one-year MBA programmes witnessing an increase in applications. Close to 54% of European programmes reported a decline in their foreign candidate pool.

In contrast, a drop in domestic applications led to a decline in applications in Asia-Pacific. Just 46% of two-year full-time programmes in the region reported increased applications in 2013 compared with 79% in 2012. Similarly, only 53% of one-year full-time programmes had increased applications in 2013 compared with 77% in 2012.

"The current slowdown in applications for full-time two-year MBA programmes in the Asia-Pacific region is occurring at the same time when the rate of economic growth in the region is slowing down, most notably in China," the survey report said.

Meanwhile, the master's programmes in management continued their positive cumulative growth, with the majority of them (61%) reporting increased application. The story of master's programmes in accounting and finance was quite different: after many years of strong performance, only 48% programmes in finance and 39% in accounting reported increased or stable application volume.

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