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No more abroad plans for Indians
By    siliconindia news bureau
Friday, July 25, 2008
Bangalore: The 'brain drain' seems to be reversing for India. According to placement figures at the Indian Institute of Management (IIM), Bangalore, 75 percent of this year's graduates opted for jobs in India, writes Shoba Narayan, who returned to India after living in the U.S. for 20 years.


Unlike in the past when people queued in front of American consulate for days to get a U.S. visa, they prefer home to any other country today. Sourav Mukherji, placement director at the IIM-Bangalore, sees his students being more discerning about the jobs they take. "Going abroad is viewed as a choice, not a given," he says. Out of the 256 students in IIM Bangalore's graduating class, only 65 opted for international locations; 75 percent of the class opted for jobs in India, and four students opted out of the placement process altogether to pursue entrepreneurial dreams. Finance and banking followed by consulting are the most sought after careers, with 40 percent of the students opting for jobs in finance and 37 percent in consulting.

At IIM Ahmedabad, many students turned down jobs in prominent companies abroad to stay and work in India, according to Piyush Kumar Sinha, chairperson of placement at the Institute. The major reason is India's emergence as a 'hot' global economy. Most of the students view studying and working abroad with a nonchalance.

The article goes on to say that more women (roughly 50 percent of the IIM-B class) choose foreign postings mostly because they gravitate towards finance. Nidhi Gupta, a graduate from IIT Bombay, plans to work at HSBC in London, where she has accepted a job offer in the capital markets side for a few years. She thinks that she will learn a lot from the exposure. "But eventually, I want to come back to India and start something on my own."

And as those students, who leave for any foreign country, say that they will come back in a few years, the so-called 'brain drain' is slowly turning into a brain-gain, says the article published on Knowledge@Wharton.

Thousands of Asian entrepreneurs have proved in the recent past that there is money to be made in China, India, Taiwan and Korea. So if the money is your goal, says the article, you don't have to go abroad for that. The slowdown of the U.S. economy bolsters this argument somewhat.

     
   
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Reader's comments(11)
1 I think Its really a positive move..!!
Posted by: Basavaraj
2 Read the Wharton article... was sent by one of our profs.. its indeed good to
know this... hope to see a positive change soon... cheers :)
Posted by: Neel Shah
3 A very smart thinking i can say, however it would be better if they can go
abroad and learn new methodology to serve our country better.
Posted by: Shailu
4 It is always better to serve for our own motherland. India is gaining potential
and this potential drove me back from Australia. It is nothing that foreign
destinations are not good in professional terms or growth opportunities, but
living the life with taste of food, fun @ work and helping our own country to
make better everyday.

Overall, a fantastic article which has boosted my confidence by proving that my
decision of returning was absolutely correct..
Posted by: Nishith Shah
5 Predictions are coming true and we indians are basically from karma boomi of the
universe we could see. Its only the meterialistic maya of western culture took
us away from understanding our own power that existed, exit and will contineu to
exist. There is nothing to feel different and this is ofcourse
an eye opener for those in the world of maya believing all countries except
india our mother are good. Thanks a lot. vasudevan.
Posted by: vasudevan
6 I've been dreaming for this pattern long ago. Being part of the Young India, I
am very proud as I've always been about my country.
Posted by: Naren
7 It is particularly heart warming to see such news. Its high time the US and the
rest of the world realized that India is no longer just a mystical land of snake
charmers and sacred cows. The youth do us proud! I have met many young
professionals from India in the US and they are well received and the general
perception is that Indians are a smart lot.
However, what pains me is the perception of the Indians who left India a long
time ago from villages and small towns and settled else where in the world and
maybe later trickled into the US or Uk. They are so primitive in their thoughts
about India and life there. In fact at a particular wedding in London, the
Indian priest (who incidentally had a cockney accent and read the sanskrit
shloks from a book where I could see them written in English!), joked with the
groom and said, "Don't worry about taking your shoes off, you come from India
originally, where people walk bare foot on the roads!" I had no words to explain
his ignorance. They neither belong here nor there, are confused to say the least
and in trying to adapt and blend in to the local culture, have made such a
mish-mash of their own that I can only pity them.
No wonder their children say things like," Mereko Hungry lagi hai", and "Mein
guitar khelta hun".

I am a proud Indian and choose to be so no matter where I live. I don't change
my accent to blend with the 'it' crowd. I speak well and its the way I was
taught to in India. Way to go young India!

Posted by: Poonam Bhogal
8 I am very happy to see that this article / statistics is being made public but
not surprised with this trend.

I would appreicate publishing similar statistics (jobs from premier institutes,
returning professions from North America, returning professional after studies)
on regular basis.

Thanks
Posted by: Amulya Gurtu
9 I am not surprised with the stats. Having lived in the US for the past 23 years
I can vouch that the current scenario in the US is far from desirable. There is
no real advantage coming here. When I came in the '80s there weren't as many
high paying jobs (atleast that was the perception) and the US was seen as mecca
for pursuing one's dreams. No more! With the US economy in dire straits and
oil prices hitting record highs there is quite a bit of stomach-churning
uncertainty. For us baby-boomers Social Security is a big question mark. Taken
together along with the fact that South Asia's economy is in full throttle it is
no wonder that the young Indians today seem to prefer home to anywhere else. It
bodes well for India that her sons and daughters are rooting for her more than
ever before. Kudos!
Posted by: Krishnan Gopal
10 Excellant info...besides these facts, now there is increasing number of senior
folks(esp IT professionals) in US who are contemplating relocating to India coz
they see India as a very lucrative job market plus u r close to home n family :)
Posted by: Shafiq
11 This is a very good thing. Atleast the Indian youth is waking up and
contributing much towards the
Posted by: Subha