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UID: ED-20251226-IN-03
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The academic rationale behind setting up the Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs) in India was driven by the need to develop high-quality management education to support the country’s economic planning, industrial growth, and administrative capacity in the post-independence era. As India pursued industrialisation and the expansion of public and private enterprises, there was a clear requirement for professionally trained managers equipped with analytical, strategic, and leadership skills. IIMs were conceived as centres of excellence in management education, with a strong emphasis on analytical rigour, decision-making, and applied research. Their academic design drew on global best practices while being adapted to Indian economic and organisational contexts. Case-based learning, quantitative analysis, and interdisciplinary approaches were central to their pedagogy, enabling students to address complex managerial and policy challenges.
A key academic objective was to build indigenous management knowledge rather than rely solely on imported theories. IIMs were expected to conduct research on Indian markets, public sector enterprises, development institutions, and social organisations, thereby generating context-specific insights. They also played an important role in faculty development and in setting academic benchmarks for management education nationwide. By maintaining high admission standards and academic autonomy, IIMs helped professionalise management as a discipline in India. Academically, they contributed to improving the quality, relevance, and credibility of management education, supporting both economic development and institutional governance.
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