The Economist’s Historical Rankings by: John A. Byrne on September 11, 2012 | | 10,008 Views September 11, 2012 Copy Link Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email Share on LinkedIn Share on WhatsApp Share on Reddit THE COMBINED RANKINGS FROM TEN YEARS OF THE ECONOMIST’S DATA FROM 2002 TO 2011 Rank & School Index 2011 Rank Highest Rank Lowest Rank 1. Dartmouth (Tuck) 100.0 1 1 6 2. Chicago (Booth) 99.4 2 1 6 3. Stanford GSB 98.2 8 2 8 4. IMD 98.1 3 1 9 5. Harvard 95.2 5 4 13 6. Northwestern (Kellogg) 93.9 18 1 18 7. UC-Berkeley (Haas) 92.9 6 3 19 8. Columbia 91.0 7 6 21 9. IESE 90.3 10 1 65 10. New York (Stern) 90.2 12 7 31 11. Pennsylvania (Wharton) 89.3 15 8 21 12. Virginia (Darden) 88.1 4 4 25 13. IE Business School 86.8 24 8 24 14. MIT (Sloan) 86.1 11 11 19 15. Michigan (Ross) 85.6 30 8 30 16. Cranfield 84.4 23 11 32 17. London 84.3 13 9 31 18. York (Schulich) 83.9 9 9 30 19. Yale 82.1 26 7 30 20. INSEAD 82.0 19 11 33 21. Duke (Fuqua) 81.8 20 3 29 22. Cornell (Johnson) 79.5 25 13 33 23. HEC Paris 78.5 14 9 44 24. UCLA (Anderson) 76.4 27 7 50 25. Carnegie Mellon (Tepper) 74.4 16 16 35 Source: The Economist global MBA rankings DON’T MISS: RANKING THE RANKINGS or THE 2011 ECONOMIST RANKING OF THE BEST BUSINESS SCHOOLS or BILL RIDGERS: THE GURU OF THE ECONOMIST’S MBA RANKINGS (See following page for The Economist’s historical MBA rankings from 2002 to 2011) Previous Page Continue ReadingPage 2 of 4 1 2 3 4 Questions about this article? Email us or leave a comment below. Please enable JavaScript to view the comments powered by Disqus.