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DEE Conference 2011. Employability of Economics Graduates – Bridging the gap!. G. S. Panikar , Satheesh Menon , Jose Augustine, Rajam Rajagopalan The Economics Club, Mumbai. The Road Ahead…. Background Research objectives Research Methodology Survey of Employers
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DEE Conference 2011 Employability of Economics Graduates – Bridging the gap! G. S. Panikar, SatheeshMenon, Jose Augustine, RajamRajagopalan The Economics Club, Mumbai
The Road Ahead… • Background • Research objectives • Research Methodology • Survey of Employers • Academicians’ perspective • Survey of Recent Economics Graduates • Bridging the gap
Background… • Indian economy • high growth rates • managed to survive the global slowdown • increasingly favourable investment climate • Huge domestic demand fuelled by a growing middle class • Need for economists who can: • analyse both the domestic market as well as global trends and predict opportunities
Background… • India has one of the world’s youngest population • Unprecedented opportunity to accelerate growth • Equipping the youth with the right set of skills critical to acquire a competitive edge and maintain its engine of growth [The World Development Report 2007] • Increasing employment opportunities available • Yet organisations are facing a shortage of skilled and competent manpower!
Employability – a key concern • Do employers feel that economics graduates have the requisite skills and competencies? • If there is a skill gap, how can it be filled? • What steps should institutes teaching economics take to develop inadequate skills? • How can students be taught to apply their skills in the real world? • How do we make economics graduates “employable” in the true sense of the word?
Objectives • To elicit responses with respect to the skills and attributes that enhances employability for economics graduates • To understand the attitude of potential employers towards economics graduates • To identify skill gaps vis-a-vis the needs of employers • To come up with measures to fill these gaps by • Elaborating the role of educational institutions and academics • Identifying areas of industry-academia partnership
METHODOLOGY: Mix of Qualitative & Quantitative Research • RESEARCH TOOLS: Interviews and Focus group discussion • MARKET: Mumbai • RESPONDENTS: • Employers • Academicians • Recent economics graduates who are employed
SAMPLE SPREAD • Interviews: • 14 interviews with Employers • 6 interviews with Academicians • 20 interviews with recent economics graduates • One Focus Group Discussion with Employers
Employer Speak… • “Syllabus is too theoretical with no practical relevance. Quantitative techniques are essential; the faculty too needs training in quantitative skills.” - Dr. Patil, Joint Director, Securities & Exchange Board of India • “There is a scarcity in human resource. There is a need for market orientation as against the traditional production orientation when it comes to education.” - Mr. MinooShroff, President, Forum of Free Enterprise
Employer Speak… • “There are inadequacies in the system, curriculum and assessment. There are rigidities or inflexibilities in going beyond the syllabus. The need is to translate knowledge to practical relevance.” - Mr. S.S. Bhandare, Former Chief Economist, Tata Group • “Academic institutions do not provide problem solving assignments. Without quantitative skills students are at a disadvantage. Students do not read original texts. Many a times teachers are not motivated enough.” - Dr. RupaRegeNitsure, Chief Economist, Bank of Baroda
Teacher Speak… • “Statistics with computer orientation should be compulsory.” • “ ‘Add on’ courses on current affairs should be introduced (can be organised by the Economics Club of Mumbai or/and a cluster of colleges).” • “There is lack of problem solving mode or tutorials for core courses... problem solving internalises the knowledge.” • “There is a need for English language training, you cannot write well unless you read well. Presentations should be a part of evaluation.”
Teacher Speak… • “The system in itself is defective. You cannot have the current system and still talk about employability.” • “The existing outdated reference books must be replaced with good international reference books used by leading institutions across the world at the earliest...” • “Economics education should not be tailored to market demand; value of the programme should be social scientific.”
Bridging the Gap • There exists a significant competency / skill gap • Could very well be applicable to the rest of the country • Investment in higher education to improve the overall quality of education delivery is critical. • Educational institutions have to train students to think like economists! • Industry-academia partnership needs to be forged.
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