Is MBA The Future Passport For A Decent Job?

HOLDING a master’s in business administration (MBA) could be a pre-requisite to any position you are eying in a big company sooner or later. As the world gets more complicated, not being financially prudent could spell disaster to anybody, but the greatest harm done is to yourself. Take this current crisis as a chance to sharpen your financial intelligence. Everyone's doing it, don't be left out.




Article below is taken from www.todayonline.com/articles/284969.asp

MBA: Back In Business


Matthew Lynn
THE credit crunch is already reshaping lives and forcing people to plan new careers.
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In the United States and Britain, the two countries most affected by the financial-market turmoil, more and more people are signing up to do a master’s in business administration (MBA).
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The days when arts graduates made good money doing public relations for hedge funds are over. There won’t be so many jobs for lightly-qualified bankers or private-equity executives as there have been in the past five years. The times are getting serious, and anyone who wants to prosper within a much tougher global economy will have to get serious as well.
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A few years ago, it was possible to argue that the MBA, long regarded as the gold standard of business education, was in decline. GMAC, the Graduate Management Admission Council, tracks business schools around the world, from McLean, Virginia, monitoring the number of students applying for the course. By 2004, it was reporting a drop in applications to business schools.
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Fast-forward to 2008, and that has turned around as bankers lose their jobs.
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In August, the council reported that MBA applications were rising at the fastest pace in history. According to the Application Trends Survey of full-time programmes, 77 per cent of business schools had an increased number of applications this year, the highest rate in five years. That compared with64 per cent a year ago. Part-time and executive MBA programmes also had higher numbers. The survey covered 521 graduate management programmes in the US, Europe and elsewhere.
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There are similar signs in Britain. “Demand from home and European Union students for business and management courses is up, particularly MBA courses,” says Ms Vicky Robinson, head of marketing communications at the Association of Business Schools in London.
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So what’s going on? “Going to business school is one of the best ways to improve your marketability and expand your options anytime — but especially in this challenging economic climate,” Mr David Wilson, president of GMAC, said in a statement on the latest survey.
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Business education is booming for several reasons. First, people are rightly nervous about the future. They are brushing up their qualifications in preparation for a far more competitive global labour market.
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“Evidence from previous recessions shows us that business schools and universities tend to benefit as people undertake courses to ride out the recession and improve their own CVs,” Ms Robinson says.
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Two, if you get fired, an MBA is going to help you find a new job. The GMAC survey found that three months before graduation, 57 per cent of MBA students already had employment, the highest rate since 2001. In a tougher job market, early offers will be even more of a bonus than in the past.
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Three, studying is cheaper, not in real terms, but compared with what else you could do. In a bubble economy, it makes sense to be working because you can earn a lot of money. Students, meanwhile, make nothing and they have to pay for the course. In a recession, that equation is reversed. If you weren’t going to be earning much anyway, it’s better to study instead.
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Four, the global economy is now experiencing an earthquake that needs to be analysed by business schools. It might be a decade or more before we fully comprehend the credit crunch, just as it took a long time to grasp the reasons for the Great Depression of the 1930s (and maybe we haven’t got there yet).
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One thing is clear: The world is a lot more interconnected than it has ever been. A mortgage turns sour in Ohio, and six months later the Hungarian forint collapses. Anyone running a business in the next decade will need a deep understanding of how all the connections in the global economy hook up — the kind of thing they should be learning at business school. BLOOMBERG
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The writer is a Bloombergcolumnist. The opinions expressed are his own.

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