After contributing $250,000 to the proposed centre, USAID diverted the rest of the pledged amount to its flood relief operations, leaving IBA in the lurch, according to Dr Ishrat Husain, Dean and Director of IBA.
Husain said JE Austin Associates, an international consulting company, was commissioned to carry out a comprehensive survey to determine the need for the proposed centre.
“With the feedback from the private sector, the government and the academia, a business plan was prepared, which was reviewed by an independent expert and finally approved by IBA’s Board of Governors,” he said.
When contacted, a USAID official confirmed that funds had been diverted from other projects to flood relief activities.
According to the business plan, IBA sought the help of a donor for the construction of the centre on its main campus at the University of Karachi. Husain said the construction phase, which cost Rs250 million, would be over by the end of the first quarter of 2012.
He said IBA collaborated with the Babson College, Massachusetts, United States, for the curriculum development of its bachelor’s programme in entrepreneurship. Three permanent faculty members of IBA have recently taken courses at Babson College, while another two will leave for the United States this year as part of the ongoing collaboration between the two business schools.
“IBA is already a part of the Global Entrepreneurship Programme and follows the best teaching practices,” Husain said. The Centre for Entrepreneurial Development is the first initiative of its kind in Pakistan. According to the programme outline, a number of courses on entrepreneurship that will be taught at the centre have never been a part of curricula at Pakistan’s business schools.
Along with the Centre for Entrepreneurial Development, IBA also plans to set up a Centre for Access to Finance, which will focus on transforming business ideas of IBA students into “bankable business plans,” Husain said.
“So far, business students in Pakistan have been obsessed with nine-to-five jobs that multinational companies offer,” he said. He added that now it was time to encourage venture capitalists to come forward and help start-ups.
Husain said it was important for business students to have academic training to identify new business opportunities because established enterprises often failed to pay due attention to changing market situations.
“Capitalism is creative destruction. New opportunities must be ceased. But multinational companies are too bureaucratic and inflexible to cease new opportunities,” Husain said.
“IBA faculty members, along with students, have recently done case studies on Barbeque Tonight, National Foods and Student Biryani,” he said, adding that IBA graduates have consistently set up successful businesses over the years.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 19th, 2011.
COMMENTS (7)
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@Saud and You Said It!
I believe it is IBA's right to raise voice against wrong that had happened to them. The project was initiated based on the condition that finding would come in from USAID. If it has not not, IBA has every right to raise it voice.
Saud! Don't reach conclusion without proper knowledge (as you have told others!). IBA has already worked on raising additional funds. It has already raised a lot of money for this center from other sources. The building will be fully operational in 2012. While several programs have already been launched by the center. It has initiated a full-time separate BBA in entrepreneurship. With that, it also organizes Pakistan's biggest business plan competition called Invent. It has also undertaken several other projects. Therefore, IBA has been entrepreneurial and initiated this project despite several hindrances- the major one being USAID.
This article has only mentioned about the cancellation of US-Aid funds for the proposed entrepreneurship building. It in no way mentions the inability of the institute or the total inability of the management to raise new funds. So please kindly focus on the main issue and do not try to reach conclusions without proper knowledge. The institute has before and hopefully will find alternative sources of funds and thus would complete the project in the stipulated time. And for you reference Mr.Hedayat please dont generalize IBA graduates based on a small sample. These graduates are made to be 'street smart' and rought and tough which is the pre-requisite for entering the practical world. Since I could see a clear bias in the above comments this reply was a must.
How about the institute's faculty practice what they teach and show some "Entrepreneurship" and come up with new "business plans" to build the centre. If these supposed elites cannot survive without US aid, then it just shows that all talk of rejecting-aid and trade-not-aid is idle pretense.
correction: acumenfund.org
Ideas are dime-a-dozen. There are hundreds of ways to raise capital but it requires hard work. There is so much opportunity within Pakistan in marketing products related to clean drinking water in town and villages, energy such as solar powered lights for small shopkeepers, clay brick making machines to name a few. But, they are not as sexy as Fashion and IT and do take time to be profitable. Most IBA grads are too good to get their hands dirty and think about the Bottom of the Pyramid (BOP) customers. To understand what I am taking about please visit accumenfund.org
Sell city campus and main campus.. enough money will be generated for land and a grand campus building in phase 8 extention.
So if this programme was need driven and USAID has diverted funds,why panic, start a fund raising drive and have local philanthropist contribute. For sure,IBA has a large alumni network who have made it good. Mr FM, you start the drive..please