A quiet "fire sale" on one of America's most expensive graduate degrees signals a fundamental shift in the value of a traditional M.B.A.
A growing number of prominent US business schools are offering tuition discounts of up to 50 percent, a direct response to softening demand for traditional M.B.A.s and the disruptive force of artificial intelligence on the professional landscape.
"A lot of people used to treat the M.B.A. as two years of exploration, but most professionals don’t feel that is a solid bet in the current environment," said Petia Whitmore, founder of admissions consulting firm My MBA Path and a former dean of graduate admissions at Babson College. "They’re saying, I can continue to just learn on the job. I’m actually OK the way I am."
The data reflects a significant market correction. Purdue University’s Mitch Daniels School of Business has slashed its online M.B.A. tuition by 40 percent to $36,000. Johns Hopkins University’s Carey Business School is offering 50 percent scholarships for some master's programs, while the University of California, Irvine, is cutting costs by as much as 38 percent. This trend is supported by data from the Graduate Management Admission Council, which shows 62 percent of graduate management students received financial aid in 2025, up from 48 percent a decade prior.
For students, the discounts offer a more affordable path to acquiring skills in a volatile job market. For the schools, however, the price war raises questions about the long-term sustainability of their business models. The challenge is to adapt curricula and pricing to a world where AI is reshaping career paths and the skills required to succeed.
The AI Catalyst
The rise of AI is a primary driver behind this educational pivot. As routine analytical tasks become automated, employers and prospective students are prioritizing a new set of capabilities. Washington University’s Olin Business School in St. Louis is directly targeting this shift, launching a $10,000 scholarship for professionals affected by AI for its new master’s in AI for Business program.
"Almost every job posting I’ve seen for internships or new graduates wants some kind of AI skills and expertise," said Christien Wong, a student enrolling in the Olin program this fall.
This demand reflects a broader understanding that proficiency with AI is becoming a baseline expectation. Graduates are now expected to have AI fluency, which includes not just using the tools but also exercising judgment, applying domain-specific knowledge, and verifying AI-generated outputs, according to recent industry analysis. The most valuable professionals will be those who can guide AI toward useful answers and then apply context and critical thinking to the results.
A New Curriculum for a New Economy
In response, business schools are not just cutting prices; they are redesigning their products. The focus is shifting from the traditional, two-year residential M.B.A. toward shorter, more flexible, and highly specialized programs that integrate AI and technology. UC Irvine’s discounted Flex and Executive M.B.A. programs, for instance, now feature a redesigned curriculum centered on AI and emerging technologies.
This unbundling of the M.B.A. allows professionals to "upskill" without having to step away from their careers for two years. Despite the high costs, a recent Gallup poll shows 71 percent of alumni believe their degree was worth the price, suggesting continued faith in higher education. However, the same poll found that 53 percent of alumni wished they had received more career coaching, highlighting the demand for education that is directly applicable to career goals in a changing economy.
The trend is clear: business schools are adapting to a market that demands not just a credential, but tangible, future-proof skills. As the AI market is projected to expand 25-fold to $4.8 trillion by 2033, according to a UNCTAD report, the pressure on educational institutions to evolve will only intensify.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.