The coveted IIM tag is set to get more expensive
from this year. At least nine Indian Institutes of Management, from top ones
like Bangalore, Calcutta, Ahmedabad and Indore to their newer counterparts at
Rohtak, Ranchi, Trichy, Udaipur and Amritsar, have either increased or are in
the process of hiking fees by 5-17% for the 2018-20 batches, citing
inflationary pressures and higher operational expenses, including faculty
salaries and infrastructure costs.
Depending upon the institute, students will pay
₹80,000-2 lakh more for their MBAs. Fees at the IIMs for the two-year flagship
postgraduate programme range from ₹9 lakh to ₹22 lakh after this year’s
increase at IIM Ahmedabad.
Among IIMs increasing fee this year is IIM Bangalore, which will now charge ₹21 lakh for its two-year programme, up from ₹19.5 lakh last year. IIM Indore is going in for a ₹2 lakh fee increase to ₹16 lakh after two years.
IIM Ahmedabad, which offers the most expensive programme among the IIMs, recently affected a hike for the third year running — to ₹22 lakh from ₹21lakh. IIM Calcutta too has raised fees, by₹1lakh to ₹21lakh for the upcoming session. According to IIM authorities, fee hikes have become par for the course as they try to keep pace with inflation, faculty pay hikes and the cost of infrastructure. Increasing fees is now becoming a compulsion for older and mid-level IIMs such as us.
Among IIMs increasing fee this year is IIM Bangalore, which will now charge ₹21 lakh for its two-year programme, up from ₹19.5 lakh last year. IIM Indore is going in for a ₹2 lakh fee increase to ₹16 lakh after two years.
IIM Ahmedabad, which offers the most expensive programme among the IIMs, recently affected a hike for the third year running — to ₹22 lakh from ₹21lakh. IIM Calcutta too has raised fees, by₹1lakh to ₹21lakh for the upcoming session. According to IIM authorities, fee hikes have become par for the course as they try to keep pace with inflation, faculty pay hikes and the cost of infrastructure. Increasing fees is now becoming a compulsion for older and mid-level IIMs such as us.
After the first 10 years, IIMs are required to generate their
own revenue and sustain themselves through their own corpus. Faculty salaries
go up, cost of messes goes up, cost of hospitality, security, infrastructure,
security goes up, thus necessitating a hike. Rohtak, which is nearing its
10-year period, has raised its fees by around 7% this year.
Set up in the same year as Rohtak, IIM Ranchi has hiked fees
from ₹12.5 lakh to ₹14 lakh, said its director Shailendra Singh.
At IIM Trichy, fees have gone up from ₹12 lakh to ₹14 lakh. “IIMs have consistently been focusing on providing better quality education, many have international accreditations. Factoring in that, plus increasing costs, fees are bound to go up,” said IIM Trichy director B Metri. “verage salary packages for the students are also going up and the payback period is quite reasonable.
At IIM Trichy, fees have gone up from ₹12 lakh to ₹14 lakh. “IIMs have consistently been focusing on providing better quality education, many have international accreditations. Factoring in that, plus increasing costs, fees are bound to go up,” said IIM Trichy director B Metri. “verage salary packages for the students are also going up and the payback period is quite reasonable.
Other new IIMs have also jumped on to the fee-hike bandwagon.
This includes IIM Udaipur, which has increased its total fees by ₹80,000 to ₹14
lakh. The institute says the reason behind this revision is the central pay
commission award and the goods and services tax (GST). Sources at IIM Amritsar
said it is also contemplating raising its existing fees to ₹10.5 lakh from the
current ₹9 lakh.
Experts feel this trend of increasing fees more frequently
than before is here to stay. The market is determining prices. Salaries have
improved so much and there is a sizable demand for good management talent.
No comments:
Post a Comment