88% Indians keen to send children abroad

88% Indians keen to send children abroad
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Highlights

A vast majority of Indian parents prefer to invest in an international education for their child and are willing to spend more to sponsor their higher education abroad, a study reveals. Parents are increasingly willing to spend more for kids\' education overseas as 88 per cent of them want to send their children abroad for post-graduate studies, said an HSBC survey.

New Delhi: A vast majority of Indian parents prefer to invest in an international education for their child and are willing to spend more to sponsor their higher education abroad, a study reveals. Parents are increasingly willing to spend more for kids' education overseas as 88 per cent of them want to send their children abroad for post-graduate studies, said an HSBC survey.


According to the annual HSBC 'Value of Education Learning for Life' report, India has the world's highest proportion of parents (88 per cent) who are willing to send their children abroad for higher studies, ahead of Turkey (83 per cent), Malaysia and China (82 per cent each).


In comparison, Australia finds itself at the bottom, where 52 per cent parents are willing to send children abroad for post-graduate studies. For Canada and the United States, the figure reads 53 per cent and 59 per cent, respectively. The report singled out higher costs as one of the key barriers for Indian parents when it comes to sending children overseas for education.


But they are still willing to go that extra mile. It stated that 71 per cent of parents think a university education is extortionate, 48 per cent still believe that an undergraduate degree was necessary to achieve for their kids to achieve life goals, the Mirror reported.


Nearly 93 per cent Indian parents, who are open to the idea of an international university education, would consider paying more for it than they would do here in India. Caroline Connellan, head of UK Wealth, HSBC, said that most parents consider taking on debt to send their children to university, but even though they feel responsible to help pay for their children's education, by the time their children reach university age, they don't have the required saved despite best laid plans.

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