Some Study says that not more than 13% of the companies roughly seek to hire students with foreign degrees.
Going abroad to study and receive a foreign degree may not assure a job back in India as companies are cutting down their hiring of foreign degree holders according to a study by the British Council.
The survey, carried out across 200 Indian and foreign companies to
understand the employability potential of Indian students, has said that
less than 13% of the companies actively seek to hire students with
foreign degrees. While companies had increased hiring foreign graduates
in the past three years, the number is expected to come down this year
from 26 to 20%.
"Students with degrees from abroad should actively consider tapping
into a job market that is still underdeveloped. They will, however, need
to modify their expectations in terms of salaries, job content, and so
forth. They will also need to compete with a domestic talent pool that
most companies see as 'good enough' or 'large enough'. In fact, most
companies who do not hire foreign-trained students cite these two
factors as the main reason they do not actively look abroad for talent",
the report said.
Meanwhile, students who graduate from United States of America are more
likely to find recruiters as compared to other countries. The study
suggests that 41% of recruiters are likely to hire students who graduate
from United States followed by 26% from UK and 6% from Germany.
The study also suggested that 59% of respondents or 99 firms have not
hired students from abroad in the last two years largely due to the huge
talent pool in India. "Other reasons for sticking to Indian talent
pools included unrealistic expectations about salaries, job content or
career growth and not finding suitable matches from among these
applicants", the survey said.
On the cost side, 72% of the companies have said that foreign-university graduates expect higher salaries than
similarly-qualified Indian ones who have affected their prospects. "On
an average, graduates from abroad expect to be paid about 25% more than
their peers with Indian degrees, and 20% expect as much as a 50%
premium, or even more. However, these expectations are not always
matched by reality. A much-smaller 38% of firms actually pay higher
salaries to graduates from abroad, and the average premium paid is
fairly modest", the study said.
Indian universities have also emerged as a hunting ground for
recruiters with more than 50% of the companies hiring from the top 20
Indian institutions. According to a report by Brookings Institution,
Indian students spent at least $3 billion during 2008-2012 to study in
the United States.
Article by : BS Reporter
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