Financial Daily from THE HINDU group of publications Tuesday, Feb 10, 2004 |
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Education Industry & Economy - Education Government - Policy IIM-B weighing options to make good the loss Anjali Prayag
Bangalore , Feb. 9 NOW that the IIMs have more or less ruled out a legal recourse against the HRD Ministry's directive to impose a fee cut in their PGP (Post-Graduate Programmes) courses, the country's premier business schools are busy considering various options to make up for this revenue loss. "One of the options before us is to increase the number of Management Development Programmes (MDPs)," said Prof Prakash G. Apte, Director, Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore. In an exclusive interview with Business Line today, he said that the board of governors would meet in the next four days. "IIM-Bangalore will work out its finances then. We have not yet received the break-up for the planned and non-planned grants." But would increasing the number of management development programmes not impose a huge load on the already over-burdened professors who are handling various PG courses, executive education programmes and consultancy assignments? (IIM-Bangalore, for instance, has about 70 professors for 700 students (400 in the PGP, 300 in the PGP in Software Management and 40 PhD students) and this year, the institute has conducted about 45 MDPs.) Prof Apte said that they might even consider reducing the number of offerings for the students so that more staff time is available for corporate training programmes. On whether the institute would recruit more teachers, he said: "Yes, that would be one option," but expressed doubt about finding the right kind of talent in the industry. But this too would require Government permission. And what about additional funds for the salaries? With the cut in allocation in this year's Interim Budget - from Rs 79.73 crore last year to Rs 45 crore in 2004-05 - the IIMs would have to tread this path carefully. Meanwhile, the Government is also insisting that the IIMs increase intake of students. This might be one way of boosting their revenues, but Prof Apte said: "We can take about 40 more students, provided we have the right infrastructure like hostel rooms, mess, etc."
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