In 2008, the Robert H. Smith
School of Business announced a $12
million PhD program initiative that
will significantly enhance the
school’s ability to retain and
attract the world’s best and
brightest students. The
initiative—one of the most ambitious
in the United States—increases
annual doctoral stipends by 45
percent to $32,500 and provides
research and travel support.
Philanthropist and school namesake
Robert H. Smith, a 1950 graduate,
contributed $6 million toward the
program, matched with funds from the
University of Maryland and the
business school.
This significant investment in
the school’s PhD program bucks the
current trend in business schools,
many of which are downsizing their
doctoral programs due to a lack of
resources. Unlike MBA programs,
which generate revenue for schools,
a doctoral program costs money. And
because rankings are generally based
on the strength of a school’s MBA
program rather than its PhD program,
there is little reputational or
financial incentive for a school to
invest in its doctoral program.
So when a school is strapped for
cash its doctoral program often
feels the pinch. This has led to
smaller doctoral programs across the
board, which has in turn led to a
nationwide shortage of academically
qualified business school faculty.
The problem is so severe that the
Association to Advance Collegiate
Schools of Business (AACSB)
Management Education Task Force, in
its 2003 study “Management Education
At Risk,” declared that “Unless
decisive action is taken to reverse
declines in business doctoral
education, academic business
schools, universities, and society
will be faced with an inevitable
erosion in the quality of business
education and research.”