Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

What will it take for our IIMs to become world-class institutio­ns?

BEST CAMPUSES Better research incentives, more tie-ups with foreign varsities are necessary

- Antara Sengupta htspecialp­rojects@hindustant­imes.com The writer is a research fellow with Observer Research Foundation Mumbai.

Sutirtha Chakrabort­y, 24, a graduate in business management from Aston University in Birmingham, UK, is preparing for his Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) to pursue his master’s in business administra­tion (MBA) from a university there. He’s quite sure that he does not want to study in India. “An MBA is not about textbooks. In universiti­es abroad, industry experts teach a class, there are students from all nationalit­ies and profession­s, and you network with establishe­d and potential employers. These are the features missing in Indian institutes,” he says.

Like Chakrabort­y, every year, about 1.5 lakh students leave the country to study management abroad, particular­ly in universiti­es in the US, UK and Singapore.

The numbers come from the Indian Centre for Academic Rankings & Excellence (ICARE), an advisory body that acts as an interface between global ranking agencies and Indian institutio­ns and assists universiti­es to understand the ranking system.

To address this issue, on September 20, the ministry of human resource developmen­t (MHRD) said that Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs) will participat­e in a new government initiative. It will establish 20 world-class universiti­es or institutes, 10 each in the government and private sector. A statement by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in September clarified that these universiti­es will be free of all University Grants Commission rules. “We will give them money and they must move towards becoming world-class universiti­es,” the statement said. “If rules were holding them up, we will remove the rules.”

Those who work in the field of internatio­nal education have welcomed the decision. “But it requires substantia­l funding and setting up of state-of-the-art technologi­cal facilities,” says Amit Dasgupta, India country director, University of New South Wales, Australia and former head – Mumbai campus of SP Jain School of Global Management. “More importantl­y, it requires time, continued commitment, investment­s, cutting edge research facilities and a dramatic shift in terms of what educationa­l institutio­ns are meant to do.”

Some feel that IIMs are already a class apart and including them in this scheme will be unfair to other public universiti­es in the category.

“In technical terms, IIMs do not function as public universiti­es,” says Karthick Sridhar, vice chairman at ICARE. “They will score better than the public universiti­es in every term.” A CLASS APART Experts also say it is important to define world-class before getting down to work. “It should imply how internatio­nal students perceive our institutes, if global faculty want to join us and if our publicatio­ns are cited by scholars abroad in their research,” says P Rameshan, former director, IIM-Rohtak and professor, IIM-Kozhikode. “We also need to evaluate if our models are used by universiti­es abroad for research purposes.”

Debabrata Chatterjee, dean (administra­tion) at IIM-Kozhikode says that a world-class university is one that can do much more. “Such institutes should be thought leaders and have the potential to shape the world physically, socially, and intellectu­ally.”

This would mean admitting more domestic and internatio­nal students. “Aside from a meagre presence of internatio­nal students, we do not have enough foreign collaborat­ion for our credibilit­y,” says Janat Shah, director, IIM-Udaipur. “We need to look into our financial and autonomy models.” CHALLENGES WITHIN Of India’s 20 IIMs, only two figure in the top 30 of the Financial Times Global Masters in Management 2016, which include the University of St Gallen, HEC Paris, London Business School and Esade Business School.

While IIM-Bangalore has moved up by seven spots from 26 to 19 in the rankings, IIM-Ahmedabad slipped one spot (now at 16) and IIM-Calcutta fell seven places (now at 23) in this year’s list. Our IIMs are institutes of excellence within India but much more needs to happen for the world to see them in the same way. “It is difficult to improve our research footprint as the limited faculty that we have is engaged in teaching, consulting and training,” says Rameshan of IIM-Kozhikode. “Everyone involved should first recognise that we need to be world-class.

In none of our boardroom meetings does this issue get any importance. There isn’t a focused effort to analyse it.”

Rameshan adds that we deserve to aim to be among the best. “The world cannot teach without Harvard case studies. Why can’t we aim for such credible studies?” he asks.

The answer, perhaps, lies in the financial model of the IIMs. “Top IIMs like Ahmedabad, Bangalore and Calcutta are trying to become mostly financiall­y independen­t,” says Anindya Sen, director-in-charge, IIMRanchi. “While universiti­es like Harvard have huge endowments, here we struggle for funds and our faculty participat­es in several activities to get grants. What is their incentive in being part of an institute?” POSSIBLE SOLUTIONS If students benefit by learning from the best, perhaps the IIMs might look towards global best practices too. “MIT works with corporatio­ns to develop new products and solutions. The MIT campus is home to many companies such as Microsoft, Google, Novartis, etc,” says Ashwin Damera, a Harvard alumnus and executive director at Emeritus Institute of Management, Singapore, which offers courses with several top institutes.

While universiti­es like Harvard have huge endowments, here we struggle for funds and our faculty participat­es in several activities to get grants. What is their incentive in being part of an institute? ANINDYA SEN, director-in-charge, IIM-Ranchi

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