Indian students with foreign degrees returning home
Indian students with foreign degrees returning home
Akshay Kumar, 25, knew his journey would be tough. But he thought he was prepared.
In 2012, after an engineering degree and a oneyear stint with a
multinational, Kumar felt he needed a makeover. "I didn't want to be
stuck with civil engineering all my life. I also wanted to see the world
and explore new options," he recalls. Doing an MBA from a premier
institute was on his mind.
He did think of the Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs) and the
Xavier School of Management, but the desire for global exposure pushed
him to explore options overseas. Kumar settled for a oneyear
post-graduate course at the Imperial University in the UK, which he
financed via an education loan. "Visa rules and the bleak job market
there did weigh on my mind. But I had a feeling I could manage it," he
says. He had confidence in Imperial's good global ranking, its alumni
network and his own hard work.
Kumar began his hunt for a job virtually from the day he landed in the
UK. He studied hard to get good grades but worked even harder to find a
good job. By tapping into networks of his alumni, friends and family,
Kumar reckons he would have reached out to over 200 firms during that
year. "It didn't work. My good grades made me eligible for plenty of
jobs, but my non-European Indian passport was the problem," he shrugs.
Kumar moved back to India late last year and has just landed a job with a
private equity firm. "All my plans have been delayed by five years," he
says. Close to half his salary today goes in paying monthly instalments
on his education loan.
The World isn't Flat
The West has a problem. Its economy is in a funk, not enough jobs are
being created, cautious companies aren't hiring too many, and worried
governments — from the US to the UK — are raising visa barriers for
foreigners to work in their countries.
Young Indians, who went overseas for education, are facing a tough time
finding a job. Many like Kumar have returned home. And some are now
casting the net wider — looking for jobs from the US to Hong Kong and
Singapore — or settling for sub-optimal options. Rupa Chanda, professor,
IIM-Bangalore, who has worked on reports on international student
mobility, says visa and immigration is the biggest factor affecting
Indian students' decisions.
The US, the UK and Australia — the three most popular destinations for
Indians seeking global education — have seen the number of Indian
students come down over the past few years (see Out of Favour?).
Remember, many Indian students take hefty education loans to finance
their studies abroad. While many would find decent jobs back in India
that would not help much as these students need dollar salaries to
comfortably service their loan. This is taking its toll. "Overseas
education is costly. Many Indian students are doing a cost-benefit
analysis to figure how to recoup their investments overseas and putting
off their plans [to study there]," explains New York-based Rahul
Choudaha, chief knowledge officer, World Education Services (WES), a
non-profit organization that provides credential evaluations for
international students planning to study or work in the US and Canada.
But to be fully able to understand how this trend will play out, one
must understand the backdrop. A big generational shift is taking place
among the students looking for overseas education. Many of them now are
India's liberalization children, who have grown up post-1991 and lived
in an increasingly global world with fewer barriers.
So in many ways this is their first brush with a world with barriers.
Many are also children of globetrotting well-paid senior corporate
executives who think differently about education, exposure and investing
in a world-class education. "These parents understand the long-term
rewards of a world-class education. I see many of my friends taking
their children to these top campuses after they pass out from school to
give them a first-hand feel," says Hema Ravichandar, strategic HR expert
and a former HR head of Infosys.
Woes on Foreign Shores
Both of Ravichandar's children have studied overseas. Her daughter,
Aditi, is doing her MBA from Wharton in the US and her son Nikhil, 22,
completed his Bachelor's in economics from Warwick in the UK. Nikhil
chose the UK over India because of the flexibility available in picking
courses — he wanted to do economics with law which was impossible in
India with its rigid course structures. "Education in India is not very
research-driven and multicultural," he adds.
But during his stay there, the UK revoked the two-year work permit for
foreign graduates. Thus he needed a firm job offer to stay on after
graduation. This was difficult since he was particular about the kind of
work. "I wanted a job in economic consulting," he says. Unable to get
that he preferred to do a postgraduate programme instead. While he did
not take any loan, for many of his classmates, who had taken a hefty
education loan, things were difficult.
Now, Nikhil is back in India getting some interesting exposure at a few
start-ups in Bangalore, India's Silicon Valley. He is contemplating a
startup of his own. "This is the best time to take the risk and explore
it," he says.
Across the Atlantic, Sujoyini Mandal, in her 20s, offers another peek
into the odds that Indian students face overseas. After her graduation
from Jadavpur University, Mandal went to Singapore for her postgrad and
worked with a think-tank there. Life was good but since she had always
yearned for a degree from a world-class university, she applied for a
Master's at Harvard's Kennedy School.
For two years, she deferred her admission as she did not get any
financial aid. She saved some money and, with a bit of aid, finally took
the plunge in 2011. Foreign students in her college face an education
loan cap of $30,000 ($15,000 a year), she says, making things even more
difficult Mandal started looking for a job when she graduated in May
2013. But mandates that fitted her needs and aspirations were not easy
to come by. She did land a contract with the World Bank but that was
short term, uncertain and had no medical cover. Last month Mandal
finally landed a job with an investment bank.
Despite such struggles, there are many reasons why the pursuit of
overseas education among young Indians is unlikely to die down any time
soon.
The Demographic Bulge
Every year, around 800,000 Indian students reportedly go overseas for
their education. This costs the country close to $15 billion of forex
annually, estimates industry lobby Assocham. If students are going
overseas for education, it's because India has a problem of both
capacity and quality. The country has one of the world's largest
education infrastructures: 600 universities and 34,000 colleges with 17
million students enrolled and 5 million students graduating every year.
But India is also witnessing a demographic bulge — it has perhaps the
world's largest young population. Experts estimate that some
100-million-odd students will seek higher education over the next
decade.
The capacity problem is compounded by the quality issue. About 70% of
the capacity in India is of poor standards. At the other end of the
spectrum, competitive intensity at the premier colleges is so stiff that
it is often easier for bright students to get admission in Ivy League
colleges in the US and the UK than in the IITs, IIMs and even top
colleges in Delhi University.
All this coincides with the rise of India's aspirational upper middle
class. Over the past two decades, many first-generation Indians have
risen up the corporate hierarchy and are financially well-off. These
welltravelled, financially stable corporate executives desire the best
for their children. "They are looking for the best educational
experience. They know it is a life-long asset. Indian premier colleges
do not have the capacity and are very rigid," says TV Mohandas Pai,
chairman, Manipal Global Education. Pai's son studied at Stanford
University in the US and now works for a start-up in Silicon Valley.
This aligns well with the global trend of rising international mobility
of students. According to Institute of International Education (IIE),
since 2000, the number of students leaving home in pursuit of higher
education has increased by 65%, totalling about 4.3 million students
globally. What is more interesting is that the share of students from
the developing countries in this pie is rising — it moved up from 54.8%
to 69% between 1999 and 2009.
India vs China
Not surprisingly, the world's two most populous and powerful emerging
countries — China and India — send the largest number of students
overseas. But China has rapidly shifted gears to overtake India.
Consider what's taking place in the US. In 2000-01, India topped the
list of international students by country, with 66,836 against China's
63,211. But by 2009-10 China had overtaken India. In 2012-13, China sent
236,000 students; India was nudging the 97,000 mark. While the number
of Chinese students has been growing in double digits of late, that of
Indian students has been sliding. To understand why that is happening,
it is important to analyze the profile of students going overseas from
both the countries.
Chinese students going to the US are evenly split between undergraduate
(40%) and postgraduate programmes (44%). But Indian students are heavily
skewed towards postgraduate programmes (55%) with just 13% at the
undergraduate level. Indian students are also unique as over 60% are in
the STEM (science, technology, engineering, maths) category. Bear in
mind that historically, postgraduate and STEM programmes offer more
financial support than undergraduate and non-STEM programmes.
"The decline in Indian students is directly related to the 'Strivers'
[value-for-money seekers as per WES research, see Different Breeds], who
have been putting their plans on hold due to increasing cost of
studying abroad which in turn was triggered by economic uncertainty and
currency devaluation," says Choudaha.
A majority of Indian students arrives at the Master's level and funds
education by taking loans as financial aid from colleges has dried up.
So, while the majority of Indian students go for education loans,
Chinese students are supported by their families. According to a
research by WES, 47% of Indian respondents report loans as one of the
primary sources of funding as compared with only 3% of Chinese.
Chinese students, in contrast, are "explorers" (experience seekers),
says Choudaha. Often the only-child of financially well-off parents,
they have the financial wherewithal to study abroad and are under less
pressure to find a job there. But change may be afoot. Some Indian
students could make the transition from 'strivers' to 'explorers' and
Choudaha expects more and more Indian students — most of them children
of well-off senior executives — to go overseas at the undergraduate
level. Not so dependent on financial aid, he also sees many more Indians
exploring new interdisciplinary fields, beyond STEM. Even in the STEM
category, experts feel that Indian students will be the biggest
beneficiary as the Obama government eases rules for this critical
segment in future.
Lessons from China
Two decades back, China faced problems similar to those India faces
today — its higher education had both capacity and quality issues. Since
then China has worked hard to upgrade its educational institutions. It
has two programmes — Project 211 and Project 985. The former aims to
make 100 Chinese universities world class in the 21st century; this will
help China churn out world-class trained professionals to push economic
growth. These universities are expected to set national standards for
education quality that can be replicated by others.
Project 985 started more than a decade back and is an attempt to build
China's own Ivy League colleges in the 21st century. In the first phase
the project included nine universities. The second phase, launched in
2004, includes 40-odd universities. The projects have been backed by
significant investments. According to a New York Times report, China is
investing $250 billion a year in human capital.
The dragon country's efforts are now bearing fruit. Many Chinese
universities are climbing up the global ranks. Two Chinese universities
have made it to the top global 50 in the Times Higher Education report.
India has none. In the top 500, 16 Chinese universities make the cut
against seven from India. Mobile international students are taking note.
A decade back, China was hardly on anybody's radar.
Today, it is the third largest education hub in the world after the US
and the UK with 3.28 lakh international students, according to IIE. By
2020, it hopes to host 500,000 international students. Even Singapore is
targeting 1.5 lakh foreign students by 2015. In contrast, India was
home to just 27,000 international students in 2012. China is aware that
to push innovation and realize its economic ambitions, it must be able
to attract top talent — in its colleges and workforce.
Also, in virtually every key statistic, the world today is seeing a
shift from the West to the East. From economic GDP to consumption power,
MNCs across the board are looking at Asia and the world's two most
populous nations. This shift is happening demographically too. But in
the education space, the West still dominates.
Of the world's top 100 universities, 46 are in the US. Seven of top 10
universities are in the US. Asia has just 11 in the top 100. "It is
difficult to replicate what US has done with its universities to 2emerge
as an innovation hub," says Pai. So, ambitious and aspirational Indians
will continue to look overseas for education. But if India has to
realize its potential, it must invest heavily in building world-class
institutions in the country — the China way.
Source : The Economic Times
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