
Takuya Otani would love an MBA from a top U.S. business school, but he won't apply. When he graduates from college in Tokyo next year, he'll pass on an American degree and attend graduate school in Japan. "I am a grass-eater," Otani said wistfully, using an in-vogue expression for a person who avoids stress, controls risk and grazes contentedly in home pastures. Once a voracious consumer of American higher education, Japan is becoming a nation of grass-eaters. Undergraduate enrolment in U.S. universities has fallen 52 percent since 2000; graduate enrolment has dropped 27 percent. It is a steep, sustained and potentially harmful decline for an export-dependent nation that is losing global market share to its highly competitive Asian neighbors, whose students are stampeding into American schools...more...
Mutant Frog had a blog post on this subject back in December, following the appearance of an Asahi article which covered much the same territory. Commenters there thought the analysis was too simplistic; for instance, it ignores the growing numbers of Japanese students who enrol in non-US institutions.