Only one Hungarian university’s Master’s programme has made the Financial Times TOP 100 list
The Financial Times continues to rank Corvinus’ Master’s in Management and Organisation among the 100 best business schools in the world, and this year it ranked 9th in terms of career support and 22nd in terms of value for money. Only five institutions from the Central and Eastern European region made it into the shortlist, including Corvinus University of Budapest in Hungary alone.
Monitoring hundreds of business schools around the world, the Financial Times has again this year compiled its international ranking of the best management courses, with the Corvinus University of Budapest Master’s in Management and Organisation having been on the list almost uninterruptedly since 2005 when the list was first compiled. In the list, which is managed by the University of St. Gallen in Switzerland, Corvinus was ranked 98th overall in the global Masters in Management ranking of the renowned British business magazine.
The Hungarian management course has been ranked 9th in the overall ranking of career services – up 38 places in a single year – ahead of the French HEC Paris, which is ranked second and third in the overall ranking, and the Erasmus University Rotterdam (RSM) in the Netherlands.
The Corvinus Master in Management and Organisation has maintained its 22nd place in last year’s top ranking in terms of value for money. Corvinus management students also have a promising start to their careers, ranking in the middle of the global 100 list both in terms of short-term job placement rates within three months – which on average 93% of graduates achieve – and in terms of career progression ranking in the three years after graduation, where they came 61st. Corvinus’ training improved on both aspects of the ranking compared to last year.
Read alsoAnother Hungarian university changes its curriculum due to high costs!
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