JGU on Coursera, and other very affordable online degrees

Long title: O.P. Jindal Global University on Coursera, its alternatives, and why cheap tertiary credentials might matter to EAs

Epistemic status: Descriptive summary of publicly available program information, plus a tentative discussion of relevance to EA. The pricing and ranking claims come largely from the institutions’ own marketing pages and should be read with that in mind. The Relevance section is exploratory argument, not a cost-effectiveness analysis.

This post is the product of months of research and exploration. I have completed multiple public courses from JGU degrees on Coursera. The assessments are easy, but the guidance is significant. Credible overviews on complex topics may retain an important role in the age of LLMs and Wikipedia. A degree shows that one individual has successfully completed enough study in each course within a defined program. It would be absurd to expect a degree that costs less than $10,000 to substitute 100% of the value of a degree that costs more than $100,000. What that $90,000+ buys is not clear, but it could be separable from the core academic purpose. This order-of-magnitude gap touches on classic Singerian arguments for helping multiple people instead of one, e.g. making vitamin A more available instead of training one more excellent guide dog at the margin.

Disclosure: This post was drafted by Fable (Claude, an AI assistant by Anthropic) at the request of [ExempliGratia], in accordance with the Forum’s [rather misleading] LLM-use policy. The exact prompt is reproduced in the Appendix. All factual claims were checked against the cited sources on July 10, 2026; program fees and deadlines change frequently, so please verify current figures before acting on them. Edited repeatedly after posting to negative reception.

Summary

O.P. Jindal Global University (JGU), a private non-profit university in India with strong domestic rankings, offers four fully online degrees through Coursera at prices between roughly US$2,400 and US$3,750 for the entire degree — an order of magnitude cheaper than typical U.S. online degrees. [Some individual lectures and courses] from these degrees are also free to audit on Coursera. This post describes the university, the platform, the degrees, and how they compare with other unusually affordable online credentials (University of the People, BITS Pilani, IIT Madras, Georgia Tech OMSCS, University of London, and the announced sub-$10,000 Khan TED Institute degree). It closes by considering why radically cheap tertiary credentials might — or might not — be relevant to effective altruists, both as consumers of career capital and as people who care about global human capital formation.

Overview of highly affordable online degrees

JGU is not unique; a small ecosystem of accredited, radically cheap online degrees now exists. The most credible comparators:

InstitutionProgramApprox. total costNotes
University of the People (US)B.S. (Business, CS, Health Science)US$4,000–7,260″Tuition-free” with per-course assessment fees; accredited U.S. institution; no federal aid (University of the People, n.d.)
University of the People (US)MBA, M.S. IT, M.Ed.US$5,650–5,940Same fee model (University of the People, n.d.)
BITS Pilani (India, via Coursera)B.Sc. Computer Science₹3,44,304; US$4,404–6,600 for international learners3 years standard, extendable to 6; honours option costs more (Coursera, n.d.-g)
IIT Madras (India)B.S. Data Science & Applications₹3,86,000–4,50,000142 credits; entry via qualifier process rather than selective admission; exit points at foundation, diploma, and degree levels (Indian Institute of Technology Madras, n.d.)
Georgia Tech (US)Online M.S. Computer Science (OMSCS)≈US$6,000–7,500US$195 per credit hour for 30 credits, plus per-semester fees (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2025)
University of London (UK, via Coursera)B.Sc. Computer Science£13,967–20,791Location-based pricing; included as the “affordable Western brand” reference point (Coursera, n.d.-h)
Khan TED Institute (US, announced)B.A./​B.S. in Applied AI<US$10,000 (planned)Sal Khan/​Khan Academy, TED, and ETS venture; applications expected to open in 2027; accreditation not yet finalized (The 74, 2026)

A few observations from the comparison:

  • JGU’s master’s degrees appear to be near the global price floor for accredited, non-selective master’s programs from a well-ranked institution. At ≈US$2,400–3,400 all-in, they undercut University of the People’s master’s programs and OMSCS, with no application fee and no work-experience requirement.

  • The trade-off across the table is roughly selectivity/​brand vs. accessibility. OMSCS is highly regarded but demands a strong technical background; IIT Madras carries the IIT brand and an anyone-can-try qualifier but a demanding pace; UoPeople maximizes accessibility with U.S. accreditation but a weaker brand; JGU offers strong Indian brand recognition, especially in law, policy, and social sciences, with open admission.

  • Subject coverage barely overlaps. The cheap-degree ecosystem is dominated by computing and business. JGU’s public policy and international relations offerings are unusual — there are few, if any, comparably priced accredited master’s degrees in those fields anywhere.

  • The price floor is attracting prominent new entrants. In April 2026, Sal Khan announced the Khan TED Institute, a joint venture of Khan Academy, TED, and ETS that plans to offer a fully online, competency-based bachelor’s degree in Applied AI for under US$10,000 total, with Microsoft, Google, and Replit as early employer partners (The 74, 2026). It is worth being precise about its status: applications are not expected to open until 2027, and accreditation is still being negotiated — so unlike everything else in the table, it is an announcement rather than an enrollable degree. But a US$10,000 target from a high-credibility American consortium suggests the sub-US$10,000 accredited degree is becoming a category, not a curiosity — and it makes JGU’s US$2,400–3,750 pricing look less like an outlier and more like an early data point.

  • Recognition is jurisdiction-dependent. An Indian online degree’s acceptance by employers, credential evaluators (e.g., WES), and graduate schools outside India is improving but not guaranteed, and India’s own regulators have declined to recognize some online formats for licensed professions (the Bar Council of India does not recognize non-residential law degrees for legal practice, for example) (O. P. Jindal Global University, n.d.). Anyone pursuing these degrees for a specific downstream purpose should verify recognition for that purpose first.

Relevance?

[Fable sees] four distinct arguments, of varying strength. I find (c) the most important, with (a) and (b) as more niche cases.

(a) Cheap career capital for EAs themselves. 80,000 Hours-style career advice treats credentials as career capital purchased with time and money. If a master’s credential in public policy is instrumentally useful for policy careers — including AI governance and biosecurity policy paths — then the difference between a US$3,400 credential and a US$50,000+ credential is, in effect, a US$46,000 donation-equivalent saving, plus avoided debt constraints on career flexibility. The obvious counterargument is that elite policy careers are precisely where institutional prestige matters most, so the cheap credential may not substitute. The realistic use case is narrower: people who need a recognized master’s degree as a formal gate-pass (visa points systems, civil service eligibility, NGO HR filters, PhD admission prerequisites) rather than a prestige signal.

(b) Earning-to-give arithmetic in lower-income settings. For a talented person in a low- or middle-income country, a US$2,400 AACSB-accredited MBA or a US$3,750 bachelor’s degree may have a very high private return, and the EA-relevant version of that claim is that income gains can fund giving. Founders Pledge research estimates that a one-standard-deviation gain in learning is associated with roughly a 19% income increase across five independent lines of evidence, and argues EA has historically over-discounted education’s income effects (Albinsky, 2023). That research concerns school-age interventions, not university credentials, so the transfer is loose — but it undercuts the reflexive assumption that education is a low-return cause.

(c) Global human capital and talent pipelines. EA organizations report persistent talent constraints, and several priority areas (global health policy, AI governance in non-Western states, biosecurity) need people embedded in low- and middle-income countries. Degrees priced at Indian income levels, taught in English, with open admission, plausibly widen the funnel of people in LMICs who can enter policy and analytical careers at all. This is a diffuse, hard-to-measure effect — but the mechanism (removing a US$40,000+ barrier to entry into the credentialed professional class) is concrete.

(d) A live test of the signaling debate. EA-adjacent writing has long been split on whether education mostly builds human capital or mostly signals it (Caplan, 2018; Knoche, 2020). Giving What We Can’s review of education as a cause area is notably skeptical, emphasizing weak and inconsistent evidence for many education interventions and the possibility that credentials function as positional goods (Giving What We Can, n.d.). Radically cheap accredited degrees are an interesting natural experiment here: if credentials are mostly signaling, mass-produced cheap credentials should depreciate quickly; if they transmit real skills, price collapse in accredited education is straightforwardly one of the better pieces of news in global development. The free availability of [some of] JGU’s actual degree lectures on Coursera sharpens the experiment: the content is now approximately free, so what students are paying ₹2–3 lakh for is assessment, credentialing, and structure — a fairly clean decomposition of the bundle that signaling theorists argue about. Watching employment outcomes for these programs over the next decade would tell us something.

What this post is not claiming. Nothing above amounts to a claim that funding or promoting cheap online degrees is competitive with GiveWell-style top charities — no one has done that analysis, completion rates for online programs are generally poor, and the students who enroll are not the global poor. The claim is narrower: for individuals making career decisions, and for a community that thinks a lot about talent and human capital, a 10x–20x price drop in accredited tertiary credentials is a development worth knowing about.

Background: O.P. Jindal Global University

O.P. Jindal Global University is a private research university in Sonipat, Haryana (in India’s National Capital Region), established in 2009 by industrialist and philanthropist Naveen Jindal and named after his father, Om Prakash Jindal (O. P. Jindal Global University, n.d.). It operates as a private, non-profit university recognized by India’s University Grants Commission, and in 2020 the Government of India designated it an Institution of Eminence — a status intended to give a small number of universities greater autonomy and a mandate to reach world-class standards (O. P. Jindal Global University, n.d.).

By the standards of Indian private higher education, JGU’s reputation is strong. Its flagship Jindal Global Law School has been ranked India’s top law school in the QS World University Rankings by Subject for several consecutive years (O. P. Jindal Global University, n.d.). Coursera’s partner page describes the university as India’s number one private university per the QS World University Rankings 2021, with more than 9,000 students across twelve schools and a 1:9 faculty–student ratio (Coursera, n.d.-a). In December 2024, JGU announced that it had been placed first in the world in Times Higher Education’s inaugural Online Learning Rankings (O.P. Jindal Global University, 2024) — a claim worth noting, though readers should keep in mind that it comes from the university’s own press release, that the ranking was new, and that online-learning rankings measure institutional process rather than student outcomes.

Two caveats for completeness. First, JGU’s position in the overall QS World University Rankings is modest (951–1000 in the 2024 edition); its headline rankings are subject- and category-specific (O. P. Jindal Global University, n.d.). Second, like many universities, it has had campus controversies, including disputes over academic freedom and student discipline (O. P. Jindal Global University, n.d.). Neither point bears directly on the online degrees, but both are relevant to calibrating the marketing language.

Background: Coursera

Coursera is the largest of the massive open online course (MOOC) platforms to have evolved into a degree-granting intermediary. It was launched in 2012 by Stanford computer science professors Andrew Ng and Daphne Koller with the stated mission of providing “universal access to world-class learning,” and it is organized as a Delaware public benefit corporation and certified B Corp (Coursera, n.d.-b). The platform partners with more than 375 universities and companies to deliver courses, professional certificates, and full degrees (Coursera, n.d.-b).

In May 2026, Coursera completed a merger with Udemy; the combined company reports approximately 290 million learners, 18,000 enterprise customers, and more than US$1.5 billion in 2025 revenue (Coursera, Inc., 2026). For prospective degree students the key structural fact is unchanged: in Coursera’s degree programs, the university is the accrediting and degree-conferring body, and Coursera is the delivery platform. A JGU degree earned through Coursera is, per the program pages, the same degree the university confers on campus (Coursera, n.d.-d).

JGU degrees offered on Coursera

As of July 2026, JGU offers four fully online degrees through Coursera (Coursera, n.d.-a, n.d.-c, n.d.-d, n.d.-e, n.d.-f). All are priced in Indian rupees, with international learners paying the local-currency equivalent; none charges an application fee.

ProgramTotal tuitionDurationStructure
B.Sc. in Psychology₹3,00,000 (≈US$3,750)3–6 years165 credits, 3 trimesters/​year
M.A. in Public Policy₹3,00,000 (≈US$3,400)12–24 months12 courses
M.A. in International Relations, Security & Strategy₹3,00,000 (≈US$3,400)12–24 months12 courses
MBA with Business Analytics₹2,00,000 (≈US$2,400)12–24 months72 credits

Figures from the respective Coursera program pages, retrieved July 10, 2026. USD equivalents are Coursera’s own approximations and fluctuate with exchange rates.

B.Sc. in Psychology (Coursera, n.d.-c). A 165-credit undergraduate degree covering research methods, experimental design, and data analysis, with flexible electives and mentored research projects. Expected workload is 18–20 hours per week across three trimesters per year. Coursera lists an additional immersion fee of ₹15,000 (≈US$170 for international students). The page notes the degree qualifies graduates for Indian government examinations requiring a bachelor’s degree.

M.A. in Public Policy (Coursera, n.d.-d). Twelve courses over 12–24 months with two tracks — data analytics (quantitative policy evaluation, data visualization) and policy design — plus a dissertation component and live sessions with practitioners from organizations such as the UN, World Bank, and ILO. Admission requires only a recognized bachelor’s degree in any field; no work experience or policy background is required. There are two intakes per year (April and October).

M.A. in International Relations, Security & Strategy (Coursera, n.d.-e). Twelve courses over 12–24 months covering diplomatic practice, international security, and geopolitical strategy, with five cross-electives available from the Public Policy program and an optional dissertation track. Faculty are described as including former ambassadors, diplomats, and national security advisors. Admission requirements mirror the Public Policy program.

MBA with Business Analytics (Coursera, n.d.-f). A 72-credit program combining management fundamentals with training in Python, SQL, R, Tableau, and applications of generative AI to analytics. Listed at ₹2,00,000 for Indian learners — notably the cheapest of the four programs. Admission requires a bachelor’s degree with at least 50% aggregate marks; no work experience is required. The program page states that Jindal Global Business School holds AACSB accreditation, which it describes as covering the top ~6% of business schools globally.

You can sample the content for free. JGU also publishes individual courses from these degree programs as standalone, free-to-audit offerings on Coursera — Class Central indexes more than 60 JGU online courses (Class Central, n.d.). For example, Macroeconomics: Foundations and Insights, taught by JGU faculty, can be enrolled in at no cost, and Coursera notes that completed coursework “may count toward your degree” for admitted students (Coursera, n.d.-i). This means a prospective student can evaluate actual degree lectures — not marketing material — before committing any money, and a learner who wants the knowledge without the credential can get much of it for free.

For scale: US$2,400–3,750 total is less than the average cost of a single semester at most U.S. public universities, and roughly the price of one to two courses in a typical U.S. online master’s program.

References

Albinsky, V. (2023, July 13). Are education interventions as cost effective as the top health interventions? Five separate lines of evidence for the income effects of better education [Online forum post]. Effective Altruism Forum. https://​​forum.effectivealtruism.org/​​posts/​​8qXrou57tMGz8cWCL/​​are-education-interventions-as-cost-effective-as-the-top

Caplan, B. (2018). The case against education: Why the education system is a waste of time and money. Princeton University Press.

Class Central. (n.d.). O.P. Jindal Global University online courses. Retrieved July 10, 2026, from https://​​www.classcentral.com/​​university/​​op-jindal

Coursera. (n.d.-a). O.P. Jindal Global University online courses. Retrieved July 10, 2026, from https://​​www.coursera.org/​​partners/​​jgu

Coursera. (n.d.-b). About Coursera. Retrieved July 10, 2026, from https://​​www.coursera.org/​​about

Coursera. (n.d.-c). Bachelor of Science in Psychology, O.P. Jindal Global University. Retrieved July 10, 2026, from https://​​www.coursera.org/​​degrees/​​bachelor-of-science-psychology-jgu

Coursera. (n.d.-d). Master of Arts in Public Policy, O.P. Jindal Global University. Retrieved July 10, 2026, from https://​​www.coursera.org/​​degrees/​​ma-public-policy-jgu

Coursera. (n.d.-e). Master of Arts in International Relations, Security, and Strategy, O.P. Jindal Global University. Retrieved July 10, 2026, from https://​​www.coursera.org/​​degrees/​​ma-international-relations-security-strategy-jgu

Coursera. (n.d.-f). Master’s in Business Administration with Business Analytics, O.P. Jindal Global University. Retrieved July 10, 2026, from https://​​www.coursera.org/​​degrees/​​mba-business-analytics-jgu

Coursera. (n.d.-g). Tuition & financing: BSc in Computer Science, BITS Pilani. Retrieved July 10, 2026, from https://​​www.coursera.org/​​degrees/​​bachelor-of-science-computer-science-bits/​​tuition-financing

Coursera. (n.d.-h). Tuition and financing: BSc Computer Science, University of London. Retrieved July 10, 2026, from https://​​www.coursera.org/​​degrees/​​bachelor-of-science-computer-science-london/​​tuition-financing

Coursera. (n.d.-i). Macroeconomics: Foundations and insights [Online course]. Retrieved July 10, 2026, from https://​​www.coursera.org/​​learn/​​macroeconomics-jgu

Coursera, Inc. (2026, May 11). Coursera completes combination with Udemy to build the world’s most comprehensive skills platform [Press release]. Business Wire. https://​​www.businesswire.com/​​news/​​home/​​20260511605128/​​en/​​Coursera-Completes-Combination-with-Udemy-to-Build-the-Worlds-Most-Comprehensive-Skills-Platform

Georgia Institute of Technology, Office of the Bursar. (2025). Online Master of Science in Computer Science tuition and fees, Summer 2025. https://​​www.bursar.gatech.edu/​​student/​​tuition/​​su25/​​su25_omscs.pdf

Giving What We Can. (n.d.). Education. Retrieved July 10, 2026, from https://​​www.givingwhatwecan.org/​​research/​​other-causes/​​education

Indian Institute of Technology Madras. (n.d.). Academics: BS in Data Science and Applications. Retrieved July 10, 2026, from https://​​study.iitm.ac.in/​​ds/​​academics.html

Knoche, S. (2020, August 14). The case for education [Online forum post]. Effective Altruism Forum. https://​​forum.effectivealtruism.org/​​posts/​​qJzKztKGDbe6iocmz/​​the-case-for-education

O. P. Jindal Global University. (n.d.). In Wikipedia. Retrieved July 10, 2026, from https://​​en.wikipedia.org/​​wiki/​​O._P._Jindal_Global_University

O.P. Jindal Global University. (2024, December 13). JGU ranked No. 1 in world in Times Higher Education Online Learning Rankings 2024 [Press release]. https://​​jgu.edu.in/​​jgu-ranked-no-1-in-world-in-times-higher-education-online-learning-rankings-2024

The 74. (2026, April). Five things to know about the new Khan TED Institute. https://​​www.the74million.org/​​article/​​five-things-to-know-about-new-khan-ted-institute/​​

University of the People. (n.d.). Our fees. Retrieved July 10, 2026, from https://​​www.uopeople.edu/​​tuition-free/​​processing-fees/​​

Appendix

Prompt:

I want you to draft a post for the Effective Altruism Forum, which has an inclusive policy on AI use. I plan to credit you as Fable and include the prompt. Please include the following:

  1. background on OP Jindal Global University

  2. background on Coursera

  3. descriptions of the degrees offered by JGU on Coursera

  4. comparisons to alternative highly-affordable online degrees

  5. relevance of affordable tertiary education to effective altruist goals

[Fable’s] questions for the comments:

  • Has anyone here completed (or hired someone with) a JGU, BITS, IIT Madras, or UoPeople online degree? How was it received?

  • Are there fields where a low-cost, non-prestigious master’s is a genuine bottleneck-remover for EA-relevant careers (e.g., visa points, civil service eligibility, UN roles)?

  • Is anyone aware of completion-rate or employment-outcome data for these programs?


    Drafted by Fable (Claude), July 10, 2026, with web research against the sources listed above. Edited and posted by [ExempliGratia].