College degrees overseas out of reach for many Indians

This version of College Degrees Overseas Out Reach Many Indians 8C11030885 - Breaking News | NBC News Clone was adapted by NBC News Clone to help readers digest key facts more efficiently.

For the thousands of Indian students pursuing college degrees abroad, the thrill of starting a new chapter in their lives is being doused by the crash in the rupee, which has dramatically pushed up academic fees and the cost of living.

Shyam Mehta, a 26-year-old national from Mumbai who recently began a Master of Business Administration (MBA) program at Insead in France, said this could not have come at a worse time.

(Read more: For Indians living abroad, rupee's plunge is great news)

"The one year you do your MBA is when the rupee is at an all-time low, it feels horrible," said Mehta, who has taken out a euro-denominated loan to fund part of his 60,000 euro MBA fee.

Plans to return home to find work after he graduates next year have also been put on hold, as it would be much more expensive to pay back the loan on a rupee-denominated income. The rupee has fallen 28.4 percent against the euro over the past three months.

"Initially, I thought I would return home and work after completing the program. But since I have to pay back a loan in euros, the plans have to be reassessed. It's an extremely weak option at this point," he said.

Mehta says he now has less disposable income, and will likely need to cut back on discretionary spending during his time abroad. "There're still a lot of rupees that I need to convert into euros for day-to-day spending, on housing rent, car rentals. I need to re-budget and reallocate."

Falguni Jhaveri, who is currently in New York to enroll her daughter at a college in the city, said she and her husband budgeted for tuition fees when the rupee was at 55 against the U.S. dollar - 25 percent stronger than Thursday's trading level of 68.8.

"That's huge considering it costs us $75,000-$80,000 a year to send our daughter to college, including living and travel expenses. It's a lot of money, it's unplanned for. We'll have to reevaluate how we are going to take care of the fees," Jhaveri, who lives in Mumbai, told CNBC.

"The problem is also uncertainty and where it's going to be next. You can't plan," she added.

(Read more: Indian rupee extends slide to fresh record low)

According to Arvind Kumar Singhal, chief executive of consultancy Technopak Advisors, the number of Indian students traveling abroad to study will likely suffer a notable decline, if the rupee doesn't recover. About 200,000 Indians set off for overseas degrees every year, according to Technopak.

"For students who are already overseas, there's nothing they can do about it. This impact will happen in the next academic year, even if the rupee stabilizes, we will see a significant amount of impact with more people deciding not to send their kids overseas," he said.

Mumbai resident Miloni Shah, who has spent the past four years saving to pay for business school in the U.S., in which she plans to enroll next year, fears the money she has set aside now may no longer suffice.

"I have been saving up for business school, but if this continues, and the rupee goes to 75, 80, my savings are going to be wiped out and I may need to take out a student loan," 27-year-old Shah, who works at a private equity firm in the Indian financial capital, said. "It's really frustrating."

The share of American 25-year-olds with student debt hit 43 percent in 2012, up from 25 percent in 2003, according to a recent study by the New York Federal Reserve. The average student loan balance among the group grew to $20,326 from $10,649 over the same time.

—By CNBC's Ansuya Harjani; Follow her on Twitter@Ansuya_H


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