posted on 2007-01-01, 00:00authored byElizabeth Manning, Bill Dimovski
Pfeffer and Fong (2002) suggest that “business school enrolments have soared and business education has become a big business”. The Master of Business Administration (MBA) degree has often been held out to be useful in the career development of managers. The highest level that managers can aspire to, is to be a director of a large public company. This study investigates how many directors within the boards of Australia’s top 200 companies by market capitalization hold an MBA degree. We find that larger companies have proportionally more MBA holding directors than smaller companies. Interestingly we also find that proportionally more women hold MBAs than men; nearly one in five women directors hold an MBA within the top 200 companies dataset.
History
Journal
International journal of learning
Volume
14
Pagination
1 - 5
Location
Altona, Vic.
Open access
Yes
ISSN
1447-9494
eISSN
1447-9540
Language
eng
Notes
Reproduced with kind permission of the copyright owner. Readers must contact Common Ground publishing for permission to reproduce this article.