February 21, 2021 8:31 PM PST
when the China Europe International Business School (ceibs) was
established in Shanghai’s Pudong district in 1994, its campus abutted
mostly nondescript warehouses and tracts of marshy farmland. Today the
area is among the city’s ritziest—and gives it its iconic skyline.
ceibs, too, has become something of an icon in the quarter-century since
its founding as a joint venture between the European Union and the
Chinese government. Last month it held on to its fifth place in the
annual ranking of the world’s 100 best mbas by the Financial Times, a
newspaper. Only heavyweights such as Harvard Business School, Wharton,
Stanford’s Graduate School of Business and insead of France scored
better.To get more news about [url=http://www.acem.sjtu.edu.cn/en/]China business school[/url], you can visit acem.sjtu.edu.cn official website.
Business education in China is booming, and not just at ceibs. When
the FT first published its list in 1999, no Asian school made the cut.
This year 17 have done, nine of them Chinese. Seven Chinese institutions
are among the 90 or so worldwide to boast the coveted “triple crown” of
accreditations—from bodies in America, Belgium and Britain. In 2012 the
American one, aacsb International, accredited 13 Chinese schools, seven
of them in Hong Kong. Today it certifies 39, including 31 on the
mainland (see chart). Between them, China’s home-grown business
schools—not counting branches of Western ones it also hosts—offer more
than 200 mba programmes. Competition for places is fierce. Nearly
200,000 people applied last year, close to twice the number in 2016.
Fewer than one in four typically get in.
when the China Europe International Business School (ceibs) was
established in Shanghai’s Pudong district in 1994, its campus abutted
mostly nondescript warehouses and tracts of marshy farmland. Today the
area is among the city’s ritziest—and gives it its iconic skyline.
ceibs, too, has become something of an icon in the quarter-century since
its founding as a joint venture between the European Union and the
Chinese government. Last month it held on to its fifth place in the
annual ranking of the world’s 100 best mbas by the Financial Times, a
newspaper. Only heavyweights such as Harvard Business School, Wharton,
Stanford’s Graduate School of Business and insead of France scored
better.To get more news about [b][url=http://www.acem.sjtu.edu.cn/en/]China business school[/url][/b], you can visit acem.sjtu.edu.cn official website.
Business education in China is booming, and not just at ceibs. When
the FT first published its list in 1999, no Asian school made the cut.
This year 17 have done, nine of them Chinese. Seven Chinese institutions
are among the 90 or so worldwide to boast the coveted “triple crown” of
accreditations—from bodies in America, Belgium and Britain. In 2012 the
American one, aacsb International, accredited 13 Chinese schools, seven
of them in Hong Kong. Today it certifies 39, including 31 on the
mainland (see chart). Between them, China’s home-grown business
schools—not counting branches of Western ones it also hosts—offer more
than 200 mba programmes. Competition for places is fierce. Nearly
200,000 people applied last year, close to twice the number in 2016.
Fewer than one in four typically get in.