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How FinTech is Unlocking New Horizons for High-Growth Career Opportunities

Author: BGU Category: General Date: 07 Mar 2026

Over the past decade, there have been significant changes in the financial landscape of India, with Artificial Intelligence technology becoming integral to the functioning of financial systems. While the development of financial services has accelerated rapidly, this transformation is now beginning to reshape management education. FinTech is not only becoming a part of finance education; it is emerging as a new area of managerial specialization, where financial knowledge and technological capabilities are increasingly intertwined.

The success and global acceptance of India’s UPI model in countries such as the United Arab Emirates, Singapore, France, and Sri Lanka highlight India’s growing digital financial influence. At the same time, FinTech is rapidly transforming India’s share market through democratized access, significant cost reduction, and AI-powered real-time analytics for retail investors. This growth is driven by a robust ecosystem of over 6,000 FinTech organizations and the success of UPI, fuelling structural change in the financial sector with a strong focus on compliance, resilience, and digital infrastructure. Today, the financial sector has reached an impressive 87% adoption rate and is projected to reach $421 billion by 2029.

Traditionally, finance management in MBA programs focused on markets, investments, and corporate finance. However, the emergence of artificial intelligence, blockchain infrastructure, digital banking systems, and data-driven compliance mechanisms has significantly expanded the scope of financial decision-making.

The contemporary finance management professional is now expected to understand:

  • Algorithmic credit scoring systems
  • Digital risk management
  • Platform-based business models
  • Technologically enabled financial systems

This shift is gradually rewriting the knowledge base required to be effective in financial management.

India’s financial services ecosystem—including digital payments, neobanking, embedded finance, and regulatory technology—is evolving faster than traditional models of talent development. Product risk specialists, digital finance strategists, and financial data analysts increasingly require interdisciplinary skills. Employers now seek professionals who can interpret both financial statements and technological systems.

Consequently, management education is undergoing a structural transition. MBA (FinTech) is a specialized program marking a transition from MBA (Finance), reflecting the growing need to integrate financial expertise with technological capabilities. With a widening gap between industry demand and the limited supply of professionals trained in both finance and technology, business schools are adapting rapidly.

Several institutions such as SP Jain Institute of Management and Research, Birla Global University, Great Lakes Institute of Management, and the Indian Institutes of Management have begun introducing specialized programs that combine finance with data analytics, digital systems, and emerging financial technologies.

These developments signal a broader academic shift—from a static understanding of finance to a dynamic, technology-integrated approach. The rise of digital public infrastructure in India has further increased the relevance of FinTech education. As financial services become more data-intensive and interconnected, policy interest has grown in areas such as data governance, AI-driven decision-making, digital lending, and regulatory frameworks.

Leaders operating within these systems require a combination of financial prudence, technological fluency, and regulatory awareness. This is not merely a technical requirement—it is a strategic necessity.

The future financial leader is expected to function at the intersection of finance, technology, and policy. FinTech education does not replace traditional financial education; rather, it complements it. It equips managers to interact with advanced technologies, manage technology-related risks, and drive growth through innovation.

This shift is also redefining the evolving role of CFOs, who are now expected to move beyond traditional financial stewardship to become strategic leaders driving digital transformation, data-led decision-making, and technology-enabled innovation within organizations.

Just as analytics emerged as a key specialization with the rise of big data, FinTech is poised to become an essential component of the new digital finance era. The evolution of FinTech education marks a decisive shift—from predictable financial systems to dynamic, technology-driven ecosystems.

As India advances into its next phase of digital finance, successful business leadership will depend on the ability to merge financial acumen with technological expertise—unlocking new horizons for high-growth career opportunities in the process.

The Article is written by Dr. Pradipta Kumar Sanyal, the Dean of Birla School of Commerce at Birla Global University.