Business Standard

Over 75% wealthy Indians keen on foreign education for their kids: Survey

The survey of 1,456 Indians, having investable surplus between Rs 84 lakh ( $ 100,000) and nearly Rs 17 crore ( $ 2 million), conducted in March found the strong urge for overseas education

HDI, human developemnt, education, growth, economic growth

The survey said that financial concerns are the biggest worry for parents when the kid flies out for education.

Press Trust of India Mumbai

Listen to This Article

Over three-fourth of wealthy Indians have sent or are planning to send their kids overseas for education, according to a survey.
The survey of 1,456 Indians, having investable surplus between Rs 84 lakh ( $ 100,000) and nearly Rs 17 crore ( $ 2 million), conducted in March found the strong urge for overseas education with 78 per cent of the respondents saying they are keen on a foreign education for their children.
Investable survey is the amount set aside for investment from overall net worth.
The Global Quality of Life 2024 survey commissioned by foreign lender HSBC said the United States is top overseas destination for Indians, followed by the United Kingdom, Canada. Australia and Singapore.
 
So strong is the urge for foreign education for the child that the parents are willing to suffer financial strains as well, the survey said, pointing out that the investment in education may come at the sacrifice of retirement savings.
The expected or actual annual cost of overseas education works out at $ 62,364, and may use up to 64 per cent of parents' retirement savings.
Parents resort to dipping into general savings, taking loans and selling assets to fund the overseas education, the survey said.
The quality of overseas education tops the list of primary reason for considering the overseas education, followed closely by the possibility to specialise in an area, the survey said.
The survey said that financial concerns are the biggest worry for parents when the kid flies out for education, and followed by others like social or mental concerns and physical or health concerns.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Don't miss the most important news and views of the day. Get them on our Telegram channel

First Published: Sep 11 2024 | 10:20 PM IST

Explore News