| Today most of the   prospective students and their parents dream of IITs and IIMs. It didn't happen   so much in 60s. Most of the students from Presidency though selected in IIT went   for higher science degrees. I still remember our senior Kamal Dutta who pursued   physics. My own friend Ashoke Sengupta went to Bengal Engineering College. He   had a preference for the civil engineering and the college was rated the best in   the subject. I joined IIT, Kharagpur and selected mechanical engineering. I   don't remember if any of my classmates from Presidency or IIT did try for any   management degree. Many did get promoted and held responsible managerial   positions. Didn't we become good managers? Would have we been a better manager   with present management education?     I consider the craze   for MBA education as damaging. The best brains, if the success in the entrance   examinations of these institutes were a criterion, trained through a costly   coaching system, are vying to enter IIMs. Even IITians and other professionals   including medical graduates after four years of rigorous purely technical   education prefer to complete the MBA course before entering the job market.   Those who fail to get in the IIMs or some of the better-known B-schools of the   country go to US. As per one estimate, between 10 and 15% of US B-school   graduates are of Indian origin (this is true of B-schooll faculty too). Many who   went to US for MS in engineering subjects as getting financial assistance was   easier for that, later switched over for a MBA course. 
                      
                      Education was never   so commercial before MBA degree got popularly demanded in crazy corporate houses   of US and then in India. Japan never had any management schools. I wish someone   had researched how the managers without MBA degree faired in actual working   scenario. And now even an annual cost of Rs 2 million or more including fee at   IIMs and ISB is meager considering the pay packet that it commands after   completion. It is surprising, the aspirants as well as the parent start   calculating the break-even period after starting the work. It may be insanely   difficult to get entry because of immense competition, but after securing the   entry only mad ones will leave it whatever may be the fee and over all cost. As   someone said, "MBA is a business, big business for both student and colleges.   Students calculate returns and consider MBA as a cash cow." Somehow, I can't   relish education to be treated as business. The big starting pay   packets offered for MBAs are causing serious complexes among other professionals   including in the teachers of the same B-schools who trained those   graduates. Is there any   justification for a twenty-fold fee differential between the IITs and IIMs?   
                    
                    It all started   with the shortage of good colleges for higher professional education. At one   time, the fee in private engineering and medical colleges used to be the   highest. The demand for the seats in the few colleges of national importance   used to be very high. The private colleges established by businessmen and   politicians started making huge money to meet the demand even for very poor   quality of education provided by them. And then came IIMs and very soon it build   a brand that could get a very high starting salary for its students. Today, the medical education has lost its charm. The fees have tumbled, and   seats go unfilled. It is when the medical practitioners are in great demand to   man public health centers throughout the country. But the poor living conditions   and the initial salary offered have additionally made it unattractive. IIMs   and IITs have created another flourishing business of coaching. The best example   gets manifested in the rise of Kota or through the huge hoardings in every small   and big city.  The rise of IIMs has   created a craze for huge initial salary in all professions that is harmful.   Today an IAS, IPS officers are aggrieved. The officers in defence forces are   getting demoralized.   India needs more of   technocrats- good doctors, architects, chartered accountants, product-hardware   and software designers, maintenance engineers, quality engineers, and millions   of skilled hands to push the country on the growth path of prosperity for all   and not for few. Industry must provide at least 40% more entry salary for   those with Masters and 60% more for PhDs. Additionally it must take care of the   salaries of teachers for the courses as prerequisite.
                        
                   I get shocked to hear that some unscrupulous teachers can get one a PhD   at a cost and it is all because they feel marginalized in the education   system.    I am not against the   management education. However, it must be very specialized and continually   innovating too. It should be meant for the sufficiently experienced people from   the different professions, and not for any fresh graduates from any stream. And the fees for the courses should be dependent on the years of experiences   and status attained at the existing workplace such as lower management, middle   management, and senior management.            |