Elite universities often aspire to open outposts overseas to satisfy their ambitions to grow. Vanderbilt University Chancellor Daniel Diermeier is looking no further than the Atlantic coast of Florida.
There, he is pursuing a satellite site for Vanderbilt’s business school, the Owen Graduate School of Management. The minimum $300 million expansion in West Palm Beach, a move that would double the enrollment and faculty tied to the Owen school, boils down to one statistic.
“For the first time in U.S. history, if you take these six [Southern] states, the GDP is higher than the Northeast. That’s never happened before,” Diermeier said in an interview. He’s referring to Florida, Tennessee, Texas, Georgia and the Carolinas.
“There is a relocation of talent and capital from the traditional centers of innovations on the coasts,” Diermeier said. “In this region of the country, characterized by this high growth, we have an undersupply of great research universities. We have an oversupply in the Northeast. Even places like the Midwest or California, have a lot more than we have in this part of the country.” Nashville Business Journal