When Ravindra Madhv
of Kochi graduated from a B-school in Hyderabad in 2005, he had no doubt he
would join an MNC. Instead he joined India's legion of jobless MBAs. He began
to joke wryly that having an MBA and not having a job was "Mean,Bad and
Awful." Last month he settled for a lesser job in a call center in
Bangalore.
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Menon's plight is understandable. Premier skills-testing agency Merit Trac has just concluded, after testing 790 B-school graduates in six cities on seven key parameters, that 77 per cent of them are "unemployable". Heads of some top B-schools say this finding doesn't surprise them. "The industry is employing more and more students and finding later that many of them are not worth recruiting," said IIM-Bangalore Director Prakash Apte. The anomaly runs deeper.
Also Read : How to Get Internship at Google
Menon's plight is understandable. Premier skills-testing agency Merit Trac has just concluded, after testing 790 B-school graduates in six cities on seven key parameters, that 77 per cent of them are "unemployable". Heads of some top B-schools say this finding doesn't surprise them. "The industry is employing more and more students and finding later that many of them are not worth recruiting," said IIM-Bangalore Director Prakash Apte. The anomaly runs deeper.
Every year India Inc
needs some 1,28,000 MBAs --2,000 as CEOs and the rest at other levels.
There are 1,257
B-schools recognised by the All-India Council for Technical Education turning
out only 70,000 MBAs. MeritTrac's study sample covered this
"recognised" talent pool and found that only 23% of them were of
employable quality.
Michael Bala of
Clickjobs.com says that although India's top B-schools produce some world-class
graduates, "these are simply not enough. In any case, they are lapped up
by multinationals for astronomical salaries". He says of the hundreds of
MBAs who send resumes to Clickjobs every year, "not even half deserve
jobs". Kris Lakshmikanth of Headhunters India in Bangalore points out that
many MBAs have to join small companies to improve their skills before trying
their luck with bigger firms. Though Indian Institutes of Management were
excluded from the survey, the IIM- Bangalore director attributes "poor
quality of students to poor faculty rather than poor infrastructure" and
says even IIMs and IITs are no exception. He suggests that salaries must be
raised to attract better teachers who are getting lucrative offers from the
market. As a result, even top schools that attract the creamy layer of students
are unable to fully satisfy the corporate world's requirements. "They
totally miss out on training students in the organization dynamics of companies
in a corporate environment," says TK Kurien, CEO of Wipro BPO Solutions.
Out of the 1257 recognized schools, only 132 have been rated as "average
or better" by the All India Management Association and these produce some
20,000 graduates, but yhey are not all up to the mark, according to MeritTrac. S. Sriram, executive director of
Chennai's Great Lakes Institute of Management, says less than 100 B-schools are
"worth their salt" and students lacking even basic skills get MBA
degrees only to end up without jobs.
Also "not too surprised" by the
MeritTrac findings is Rajan Saxena, director of Mumbai's SP Jain Institute of
Management and Research, who says the "dubious quality" of management
education comes from "ninety per cent" of schools which lack even
libraries. But students from Mumbai and Pune have got a semblance of a pat on
their backs from MeritTrack, because they fared better than students from
Delhi, Kolkata, Chennai and Bangalore in the skills test carried out for the
survey. Bangalore and Chennai were the worst of the lot. One reason could be
that the south has seen more of a mushrooming of management institutes.
J.K Iyer, professor at Chennai's Loyola
College of Business Administration, says many of these schools "are like
kiosks (selling MBAs)". Iyer says "the only time corporate visit
schools in the south is for recruitment, and they end up getting bad
students." Madan Padaki of MeritTrac hopes this “serves as an eye-opener
for India Inc." Critics both in the industry and academia insist that a
national accreditation agency other than the AICTE should monitor management
education.
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