Giving back to alma mater: Ratan Tata gifts $ 50mn to Harvard

School will use money for a new academic and residential building.

PTI | October 15, 2010



India's Tata Group has given a whopping $ 50 million to the prestigious Harvard Business School here to fund a new academic and residential building on its campus. This is the largest gift received by the institute from an international donor in its 102-year-old history. The gift comes from Tata Companies, Sir Dorabji Tata Trust and the Tata Education and Development Trust, the philanthropic entities of the group. It comes days after the vice chairman and managing director of Mahindra and Mahindra Group, Anand Mahindra, gave $ 10 million to the humanities centre at Harvard. A Harvard alumnus, Mahindra gave the gift, the "largest" in the Centre's history, in honour of his mother Indira Mahindra. Tata Sons chairman Ratan Tata attended Harvard's advanced management programme -- one of three comprehensive leadership programmes offered by the Harvard Business School's (HBS') executive education in 1975. He had also received the school's highest honour, the alumni achievement award, in 1995. The school said it will use the $ 50 million gift from the Tata Group to fund a new academic and residential building on its campus for participants in its broad portfolio of executive education programmes. HBS hopes to break ground for the building, which will be named Tata Hall, next spring. It is expected to be open for use by late 2013. Calling it a privilege and a pleasure to "give back to Harvard a little bit of what it gave to me," Tata said he hoped the new facility would encourage and inspire future leaders to take advantage of the executive education offerings at HBS. "The Harvard Business School is the preeminent place to be exposed to the world's best thinking on management and leadership and we are pleased that this gift will support the school's educational mission to mold the next generation of global business leaders," Tata said. Expressing "deep appreciation" for Tata's "generosity," Harvard Business School's Indian-origin dean Nitin Nohria said the "historic" gift comes from an organisation "revered" for its significant economic, civic and philanthropic impact. "The Tata Group is widely respected for integrity and innovation, not just in India where it produced both the first indigenous car and the 2,000 dollar Tata Nano automobile but in a variety of business lines across several continents, from cars to hotels and from tea to information technology," Nohria said. Harvard University president Drew Faust said Tata knows "firsthand the transformative educational opportunities" offered through the school's executive education programmes. "Thanks to this generous gift, HBS will be able to expand its already robust offerings in executive education, deepening ties with leaders across the country and around the globe," Faust said. Boston Mayor Thomas Menino, who joined Tata and Nohria for the announcement today, said the 50 million dollar gift will help create jobs in the city. HBS launched the advanced management programme, the world's first executive education programme, in 1945. More than 9,000 business leaders from around the world enroll in the executive education programmes at HBS as well as in off-campus locations each year, participating in a range of comprehensive and custom programmes. Currently, more than 50 percent of participants are from outside the US and enroll in over 75 open enrolment executive education programmes and more than 60 custom programmes. Tata earned a degree in architecture from Cornell University in 1962. He had given an endowment of $ 50 million to Cornell in 2008 for agriculture and nutrition programmes and for the education of Indian students at Cornell. He was named one of the 30 most respected CEOs in the world by Barron's magazine in 2007, the same year the Tata Group was awarded the Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy. In 2008, he was named one of Time magazine's 100 most Influential People.

Comments

 

Other News

Beyond toilets: Why open defecation persists in rural India

Despite the awareness campaigns on sanitation across India, open defecation (OD) is practised openly and widely in both rural and urban areas. Research shows that rural respondents are well aware of the negative impacts of OD, yet this awareness does not lead to toilet construction or use. In rural North I

What unpaid nation builders want from policymakers

The Supreme Court recently described homemakers as “nation builders” and fixed a notional monthly income of Rs 30,000 for them in motor accident compensation cases. The judgment was not about wages. It was about compensation. Yet it inadvertently raised a larger economic question: If a homemake

What the US–Iran peace deal means for India

After months of rising tensions, the United States and Iran have reached a memorandum of understanding called the "Islamabad Agreement." This agreement allows for the immediate reopening of the Strait of Hormuz without tolls and provides Iran with relief from sanctions, depending on its complianc

V. M. Tarkunde: A legal luminary par excellence

14 Lawyers: Portraits from The Bar By Raju Ramachandran  Juggernaut, 248 pages, Rs. 799  

The Cost of Obesity

The latest episode of Checks and Balances focuses on the ticking time bomb of obesity in India, and Geetanjali Minhas of Governance Now spoke with a panel of experts. You can watch the episode here: https://youtu.be/mH

US-Iran deal: Path to peace or prelude to deeper regional quagmire?

In the midst of deep mistrust, the US and Iran are reported to have reached a framework deal for ending the West Asian conflict. But whether it will result in any meaningful breakthrough or pave the way for any lasting peace in the region, is in the realm of speculation.   During





Archives

Current Issue

Opinion

Facebook Twitter Google Plus Linkedin Subscribe Newsletter

Twitter