Financial Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Tuesday, Feb 10, 2004

News
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Industry & Economy - Education


Govt `price control' comes under fire

Our Bureau

Mumbai , Feb. 9

SHOULD the Government be regulating the fee structure for Indian Institute of Managements and other B-schools in India?

The Government's penchant for `price control' at the management studies level has come in for criticism from the All-India Management Association (AIMA).

"The idea of placing price restrictions on fees at IIMs is retrograde," Mr R. Gopalakrishnan, President, AIMA, and Executive Director, Tata Sons, said.

The Union Minister for Human Resources, Mr Murli Manohar Joshi, announced a drastic reduction of fees charged by IIMs and other management schools in the country.

According to Mr Gopalakrishnan, the issues germane to management studies in the country are being overlooked. "Fee is not the real issue. There are other pressing issues like the content of these courses," he said on the sidelines of an AIMA-Bombay Management Association function, `Shaping young minds.'

A decade ago, management schools, especially the IIMs, were asked to `fend for themselves,' he said.

Management students at the function also were of the opinion that reduction of fees does not augur well for the quality of management education. "Such drastic reduction in fees would mean a drop in the number of facilities that a management student enjoys. There is a lot of money involved in getting guest lecturers, computer facilities and good faculty. Obviously, this is going to impact the quality of students in the future," said a student of Welingkar Institute of Management.

The Government's argument has been that education must be within the reach of every Indian. The Ministry officials have stated that the Government is ready to fill the gap in financial position that IIM would find itself in. On this point Mr Gopalakrishnan says that the Government should be subsidising primary education rather than management education.

AIMA is planning to send a memorandum against the reduction in fees to the Government.

More Stories on : Education | Management

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



Stories in this Section
Economy to grow by 8.1 pc in '03-04


`India can grow at higher than 8%' — Mr Jaswant Singh, Finance Minister
GDP growth: Not a `statistical illusion'
Let paper and plastics coexist
Ministry orders recovery of DEPB benefits
Kerala State Housing Board announces OTS scheme
`Dahej-Uran gas pipeline EPC tendering in a fortnight'
PM dedicates 3 power projects to nation
PM dedicates Simhadri project
Ferro alloys body plea for lower power tariff
Service providers' survey in Madurai
`SSIs need exclusive policy for survival and development'
Little progress in Ganga clean-up scheme: PAC
TN: Digging deeper for water
Pune summit to highlight India's expertise in water management
IIM-C students launch consulting consortium
CAS: Area monopoly worrying stakeholders
IIM-B weighing options to make good the loss
Life sciences project gets 30-acre site
Govt `price control' comes under fire
Private hospitals join hands to reach out to patients
TN Foodgrain merchants' plea
Task force report on textile machinery may be delayed
SC puts off hearing in sell-off cases
In India's future trade wars...
Democracy is the spear and shield

Workshop on safe food at Kochi
Rehabilitation workshop at Kochi
Scientific meet at Hyderabad
Foreign flag ships chartering — Exporters unaware of cancellation of pre-approval norms
Weekend Valentine's wilts rose exports — But ducks Dutch auctions to bloom `direct' on foreign shelves
US merchandise exports up 21 pc — `Growing trade gap needs rectification'
`Diversify exports of castings to US, Canada'
M.P. High Court CJ appointed SAT presiding officer
`Consolidation likely in cement, telecom, power sectors'



The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | Business Line | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2004, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line