India’s growth in applications and enrollments to graduate programs in the U.S. over the past two years, though partially a product of the COVID-19 rebound, is likely attributable to a new reality in Indian nationals’ capacities and willingness to attend graduate institutions in the U.S.
Three possible forces coalesce to generate more graduate-ready students in India:
- a robust in-country education received before application to graduate programs that makes Indian nationals competitive for U.S. institutions,
- a steady growth in the number of Indian nationals that can afford to study abroad, and
- increased access to information and resources necessary to better shape future graduate school endeavors and to be more savvy consumers of higher education.
Key Takeaways
- In the past two years, Indian nationals have surpassed Chinese nationals in applications and first-time enrollment to graduate programs in the United States
- Close to 60% of the Indian first-time enrollees over 2021 and 2022 are not directly attributable to a COVID-rebound since most Indian first-time enrollees admitted in 2021 and 2022 were not deferrals from the height of the pandemic in 2020
- India’s development trajectory has created a potential pool of graduate-ready adults who have both the will and the financial capacity now to apply and carry out graduate education in the United States
- Future trends holding, there is the possibility that India’s education and poverty alleviation efforts over the last few decades will generate more Indian applicants and first-time enrollees