The Economist - UK (2022-02-19)

(Antfer) #1
The Economist February 19th 2022 Business 61

Educationtechnology

Learnings growth


B


yju’s waspiling  on  users  even  before
covid­19  closed  classrooms  around  the
world.  India’s  most  valuable  private  start­
up was co­founded in 2011 by Byju Raveen­
dran, a celebrity maths tutor whose classes
have drawn crowds big enough to fill stadi­
ums.  By  2019  tens  of  millions  of  Indian
children  had  signed  up  to  use  the  firm’s
flagship product, an app that serves up on­
line lessons intended to supplement regu­
lar schooling. That year Byju’s began spon­
soring India’s national cricket team.
Since  then  India’s  schools  have  spent
more  time  shut  than  open—and  the  for­
tunes  of  Byju’s  have  only  improved.  The
number of children whose parents pay for
them  to  have  full  use  of  its  app  has  more
than  doubled,  to  7m.  Late  last  year  inves­
tors valued the firm at over $20bn, a three­
fold increase since pre­covid days. In Janu­
ary  Bloomberg  reported  that  Byju’s  may
soon unveil plans to go public in New York,
by merging with a blank­cheque company.
The news agency had previously rumoured
that  such  a  deal  could  raise  around  $4bn,
valuing the firm at a cool $48bn.
Byju’s is the biggest of a clutch of young
companies  benefiting  from  breakneck
growth in online learning. Venture capital­
ists  (vcs)  plonked  around  $21bn  into  edu­
cation  technology  companies  in  2021,  ac­
cording  to  Holoniq,  a  research  firm  (see
chart).  That  was  three  times  the  amount
raised  in  2019  and  40  times  more  than  a
decade ago. Seventeen ed­tech startups be­
came  “unicorns”  (private  companies  val­
ued at more than $1bn), three times as ma­
ny as had passed that milestone during any
previous  year.  Half  a  dozen  of  them  went
public. They included Coursera, a market­
place  for  online  courses  with  a  stock­
market value of nearly $3bn, and Duolingo,
an  app  for  language  learners  which  is
worth around $4bn. Holoniqhas predicted
that global ed­tech revenues could almost
double  from  $227bn  that  year  to  around
$400bn in 2025, a fifth higher than its pre­
pandemic forecast.
Until  recently  ed­tech  firms  had  rarely
made investors sit up. Schools and univer­
sities  control  much  of  the  $6trn  spent
globally on education each year. They tend
to  be  cash­strapped  and  conservative.  In
2019 only about 3% of all education spend­
ing  went  on  software  or  online  teaching.
Tory Patterson of Owl Ventures, who began
investing in ed­tech firms in 2009, admits
that  speaking  up  for  the  sector  has  some­

timeswonhim“blankstares”.
Nomore.Theclosureofschoolbuild­
ingsandcollegecampusesforcededuca­
torstotryoutnewkit(especiallyinIndia
andAmerica,wheredisruptionstolearn­
ing have been particularly drawn out).
Governmentshavegivenchildrenstacksof
tabletcomputersandspedupeffortstoim­
provebroadbandinschools.Theyhaveal­
sogiventeachersextracashtospendon
toolstheythinkwillhelppupils“catchup”.
LawmakersinAmericahaveearmarkedan
extra$200bnorsoforschoolssincethe
pandemic started.That sum isequal to
about one­quarter of what is spent on
theseinstitutionsina typicalyear.
Foryearsmanyofthezippiested­tech
firmshavechosennottoselltoschools

anduniversitiesbuttogodirecttolearn­
ers.Thiscategoryofcompanieshasalso
benefitedduringthepandemic.Parentsin
Asiahavelongbeenkeentopayfortutor­
ingandotherservices(suchasByju’sapp)
thatmight givetheir offspringanedge.
NowfamiliesinEuropeandAmericaare
also getting keen. Supervising remote
learning has made parents everywhere
moreengaged intheirchildren’seduca­
tion,moreawareofhowtheyareperform­
ingincomparisonto classmates andin
somecasesmorecriticalofwhattheyare
beingtaught.Companiesthatofferafter­
school lessons—such as Outschool, an
Americanunicorn,andGoStudent,anAus­
trianone—aregrowingfastasa result.
Anothertypeofoutfitgettingaboost
fromthe pandemicare those that offer
learning to adults. Workers furloughed
duringlockdownscommonlytookonline
coursesthattheythoughtwouldimprove
theirprospects.Remoteworkinghasmade
morerolesplausibletomorejobseekers,
givingthemmorereasontoreskill.Atthe
sametime,a flurryofjob­switchinginBrit­
ainandAmericahasmadebigemployers
nervous. They are becoming more con­
vincedthatspendingonstafftrainingcan
helpthemhangontoworkersandcutthe
costofpluggingholes.Thisisbenefiting
companiessuchasCoursera,whichsays
sellingsubscriptionstocorporate custom­
ers is its fastest­growing business. Up­
and­coming firms include Guild, which
helpsblue­collarworkersatgiantssuchas
WalmartandDisneygainnewqualifica­
tions,andBetterUp,anAmericancompa­
nythathelpsprofessionalsfindcoaching.
Ed­tech’spandemicreportcardisnot
withoutblemishes,however.InChina,its
single biggest market, the Communist
Party declared last July that businesses
couldnottypicallymakea profitfrompro­
vidingafter­schooltutoringtochildrenin
primaryandmiddleschools.Theregime
hasworriedforyearsthathugedemandfor
privateeducationiswideninginequalities
andimpoverishingthemiddleclass.Even
charitabletutoringcouldnolongertake
place duringholidays andat weekends.
WithindaysthesharepricesofNewOrien­
tal,talEducationandGaotu,theindus­
try’sthreelistedChinesegiants,hadfallen
bytwo­thirds,wipingout$18bninstock­
market value.Since February 2021 their
collectiveworthhasshrivelledfrommore
than$100bn tolessthan$10bn.China’s
mostcelebrateded­techunicorns,Yuanfu­
daoandZuoyebang,couldbewortha frac­
tionoftheirpre­crackdownvaluationsof
$15.5bnand$10bn,respectively.
TheChineseexperiencehasrattledin­
vestors,saysThomasSinglehurstofCiti­
group,abank.Itblockedapossibleexit
routeforWesternstartups,someofwhose
vcbackersmayhavehopedtosellthemto
China’sed­techtitans.Itmayalsoinspire

The pandemic has turbocharged the ed-techbusiness.Canitlast?

Atech-ablemoment

Star pupils
Venture-capital investments in
education-technology firms, $bn

Source:HolonIQ

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