Financial Lifeline for International MBA Students

January 5th, 2010 by admin No comments »

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A Financial Lifeline for Foreign MBA Students

Six universities have joined a new program of “no co-signer” loans for international students at U.S. B-schools, and more are on the way

By Alison Damast

Admissions Director Rosemarie Martinelli remembers the panic she felt when she learned a program that the University of Chicago Booth School of Business(Booth Full-Time MBA Profile) was using for international student loans collapsed at the height of the frenzied 2008 fall admissions season. The CitiAssist loan program was the second lender to disappear at the time, and few, if any, other banks were willing to help international students secure funding.

“It was a nightmare. I lost the program just after I admitted all the students,” says Martinelli, who put in a desperate phone call to the Graduate Management Admission Council (GMAC), which administers the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT), asking for advice.

Her timing couldn’t have been better. GMAC had just convened an advisory group to help schools come up with ways to solve the international student loan crisis at business schools, and they invited Martinelli to join and brainstorm with them. By January, Booth became the first school to sign onto the Affiliated Loan Program for Students (ALPS), a pilot program financed by Deutsche Bank (DB) which makes it easier for international students to come study in the U.S.

“It provides a very, very necessary thing for us and, while it was expensive, it helped out students who wanted to come to Chicago Booth without a problem,” Martinelli says.

Growing Appeal

Nearly a year later, the loan program is starting to gain traction at business schools across the country. A number of top business schools signed on to ALPS in 2009, including Northwestern University’s Kellogg Graduate School of Management(Kellogg Full-Time MBA Profile), the University of Rochester’s Simon Graduate School of Business(Simon Full-Time MBA Profile), and UCLA’s Anderson Graduate School of Management(Anderson Full-Time MBA Profile), among others. Six universities and 15 graduate programs are now using the lending program, most of them business schools. The program holds appeal for international students because it doesn’t require them to have a U.S. co-signer to take out a loan, a crucial requirement for many students, schools say.

Over the past year, ALPS has so far issued about 3,500 loans to foreign and domestic students, and loan volume is upwards of $100 million, organizers say. Business schools are not the only ones taking an interest in the loan program; graduate law and medical programs are also taking note, and more schools are expected to join in 2010, says Kevin Moehn, president of Moehn & Associates, the loan program’s administrator, who’s in the midst of signing agreements with at least four other universities.

“As we get more schools on board, I’m convinced we’ll get some momentum,” Moehn says. “We are very pleased with this year’s volume, and we believe we should at least double the number of schools we have in 2010.”

Stepping into the Breach

Part of the reason the loan program is taking off is it is filling a void in the market created when the popular CitiAssist and Sallie Mae Loan programs were taken off the market. Those programs let foreign students borrow up to $150,000 without a co-signer to assume responsibility for the loan should the borrower default. In addition, other private lending sources that international students turned to for loans also dried up in 2009, with dozens of lenders either shutting down or halting loans to non-U.S. students without creditworthy U.S. co-signers. This left in the lurch many business school students who planned to study in the U.S. last year—until ALPS was announced last spring, with Deutsche Bank providing loan capital for the program.

Deutsche Bank saw the loan crisis as an opportunity to make inroads in the student lending market during a challenging time for students and universities, says Fred Brettschneider, head of global markets for the Americas at Deutsche Bank.

“As a result of the global financial crisis, we saw some of the country’s most prestigious schools struggling to replace student loan funding that had been restricted or discontinued by previous lenders,” says Brettschneider in a statement. “By utilizing our resources to create and invest in ALPS, Deutsche Bank is able to help students around the world further their education despite the challenges of the current lending environment.”

What Schools Like

The ALPS program is by far the largest of the business school international student loan programs currently available, and it replicates some of the popular features of the old loan programs, such as not requiring students to have a co-signer or established credit. Interest rates for the student loans are less than 10%, though rates vary depending on the school, and organizers hope rates will be even lower in 2010.

Some features of the program also make it especially appealing to graduate schools. For example, the program leverages a participating school’s credit rating, not its cash, to meet the level of student financing that the school determines. Schools also don’t incur any up-front expenses and don’t need to commit to any minimum or maximum level of loan volume, though they are required to act as co-signers on the notes for the loans, which students obtain from Liberty Bank, an Ohio-based lender. Deutsche Bank purchases the student loans from participating universities and bundles the loans into securities, which are then sold on the capital markets.

The new loan program isn’t for everybody. Several schools, including Harvard Business School (Harvard Full-Time MBA Profile), the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School (Wharton Full-Time MBA Profile), the Stanford University Graduate School of Business (Stanford Full-Time MBA Profile), and the MIT Sloan School of Management (Sloan Full-Time MBA Profile), announced deals with credit unions to provide no-co-signer loans for international students last spring.

Simon School’s Experience

But for many others, the new program is a lifeline. One institution participating in the ALPS program is Rochester’s Simon School, which signed up in July. About half the school’s student body is international, so demand for a loan program of this sort was huge, especially after the credit crunch, says Greg MacDonald, Simon’s admission director. So far, about one-third of the school’s international students have signed up for it, and the school expects even more students to sign up in 2010, MacDonald says.

“Our options for international students before this were fairly limited, and we didn’t have any no-co-signer options available for students before we signed this,” MacDonald says. “It was clearly necessary, and I’m afraid to think where we would be if we didn’t have this product to offer students.”

Other participating schools are reporting similar successes. At Northwestern, Deutsche Bank has purchased $67 million in student loans through the program. At Chicago Booth, more than 100 international students are now taking advantage of ALPS, Martinelli says. Meanwhile, the UCLA Anderson School was able to issue $3 million of loans to students through the ALPS program this year. As a result, 20 first-year and 20 second-year MBAs were able to fund their education, says Kevin McCardle, the senior associate dean of Anderson’s MBA program.

“Providing loans for international students is key. We would be in serious trouble and we would not have the international students we have now if we did not have some method of providing credit to the students,” McCardle says.

Not Much Paperwork

Roger Ivan Cordero-Mueses is one of the MBA students taking advantage of the ALPS program this year. He came here with his wife from the Dominican Republic in 2008 for business school and paid for his first year at Rochester’s Simon School by asking his wife’s sister, who lives in the U.S., to co-sign a loan for him. He was reluctant to ask her to do this again for his second year, so he was eager to sign up for Simon’s new loan program for international students, which didn’t require a co-signer.

“It was very easy to apply, and I didn’t have to do much paperwork,” he says. “I think without it, I would have had problems financing my second year of school here in the U.S. It has really helped me.”

Dave Wilson, president and CEO of GMAC, has been keeping a careful eye on the program since he helped develop it last year. So far, the feedback from schools using the program has been positive, and he expects it will help them attract more international applicants this year. Meanwhile, he is working to promote the ALPS program among his member schools, he says.

“I’m hoping the loan program will continue to tempt schools and will continue to grow,” Wilson says. “The program certainly has the financial strength in the lender to take the program up to a quarter of a billion dollars, and that starts to make a real difference. Once it becomes more broadly adapted, word will get out very quickly.”

By Alison Damast

Businessweek

Popularity: 75% [?]

Top Fifty MBA Programs in United States (Ranked by GMAT)

December 16th, 2009 by admin No comments »
Ranking Business School Average GMAT Score In State Tuition Fee Out State Tuition Fee Website
1 Stanford Graduate School of Business 726 $ 48,921 $ 48,921 gsb.stanford.edu
2 Harvard Business School 720 $ 43,800 $ 41,900 hbs.edu
3 Yale School of Management 718 $ 43,700 $ 43,700 mba.yale.edu
4 Haas School of Business 714 $ 30,925 $ 40,605 haas.berkeley.eduMFE/index.html
5 The Wharton School 714 $ 44,480 $ 44,480 wharton.upenn.edumba
6 University of Chicago Booth School of Business 713 $ 47,260 $ 47,260 chicagobooth.edu
7 Tuck School of Business 712 $ 45,600 $ 45,600 tuck.dartmouth.edu
8 UCLA Anderson School of Management 711 $ 33,295 $ 38,563 anderson.ucla.edu
9 Kellogg School of Management 710 $ 46,791 $ 46,791 kellogg.northwestern.edu
10 Columbia Business School 709 $ 46,476 $ 46,476 gsb.columbia.edu
11 Sloan School of Management 708 $ 46,784 $ 46,784 mitsloan.mit.edumba
12 Stern School of Business 708 $ 41,800 $ 41,800 stern.nyu.edu
13 Ross School of Business 706 $ 40,250 $ 45,250 bus.umich.edu
14 Darden Graduate School of Business Administration 693 $ 40,398 $ 45,398 darden.virginia.edu
15 Marshall School of Business 692 $ 41,248 $ 41,248 marshall.usc.edu
16 Tepper School of Business 690 $ 47,800 $ 47,800 tepper.cmu.edu
17 Fuqua School of Business 690 $ 44,100 $ 44,100 fuqua.duke.edu
18 Foster School of Business 688 $ 21,231 $ 31,899 foster.washington.edu
19 University of California, San Diego (UCSD) – The Rady School of Management 683 $ 11,894 management.ucsd.edu
20 Georgia Institute of Technology College of Management 681 $ 30,892 mgt.gatech.edu
21 McCombs School of Business 681 $ 24,200 $ 40,500 mba.mccombs.utexas.edu
22 Olin School of Business 681 $ 40,500 $ 40,500 olin.wustl.edu
23 Boston University School of Management 680 $ 36,998 $ 36,998 management.bu.edu
24 S.C. Johnson Graduate School of Management 680 $ 44,950 $ 44,950 johnson.cornell.edu
25 Goizueta Business School 680 $ 41,000 $ 41,000 goizueta.emory.edu
26 Warrington College of Business 680 $ 8,190 $ 23,315 floridamba.ufl.edu
27 Mount St. Mary’s College 680 $ 31,760 $ 31,760 msmc.la.eduindex.asp
28 McDonough School of Business 678 $ 39,984 $ 39,984 msb.eduprospective/graduate/mba
29 Kenan-Flagler Business School 678 $ 19,525 $ 39,049 kenan-flagler.unc.edu
30 Mendoza College of Business 677 $ 37,190 $ 37,190 mba.nd.edu
31 W. P. Carey School of Business 676 $ 17,041 $ 29,604 wpcarey.asu.edumba
32 UC Davis Graduate School of Management 675 $ 24,649 $ 36,894 gsm.ucdavis.edu
33 Merage School of Business 675 $ 27,815 $ 38,949 merage.uci.edu
34 Simon School of Business 675 $ 39,030 $ 39,030 simon.rochester.edu
35 Fisher College of Business 674 $ 22,143 $ 37,005 fishermba.osu.edu
36 Marriott School of Management 673 $ 9,240 $ 9,240 marriottschool.byu.edumba
37 Jesse H. Jones Graduate School of Management 667 $ 36,000 $ 36,000 jonesgsm.rice.edu
38 Terry College of Business 667 $ 8,918 $ 27,840 terry.uga.edumba
39 University of Wisconsin School of Business 666 $ 10,588 $ 25,678 bus.wisc.edu
40 Kelley School of Business 663 $ 18,978 $ 18,978 kelley.indiana.edumba
41 Carlson School of Management 663 $ 25,600 $ 36,450 carlsonschool.umn.edu
42 Krannert School of Management 662 $ 17,817 $ 34,340 krannert.purdue.eduprograms/masters/
43 Carroll School of Management 661 $ 66,304 $ 66,304 bc.edumba
44 Robert H. Smith School of Business 660 $ 15,032 $ 25,958 rhsmith.umd.edu
45 Owen Graduate School of Management 656 $ 39,992 $ 39,992 owen.vanderbilt.edu
46 Isenberg School of Management 656 $ 3,025 $ 11,385 som.umass.eduMBA/
47 Acton School of Business 656 $ 21,250 $ 21,250 actonmba.org/
48 Freeman School of Business 655 $ 40,229 $ 40,229 freeman.tulane.edu
49 Tippie College of Business 653 $ 13,584 $ 24,914 tippie.uiowa.edu
50 University of Texas at Dallas School of Management 651 $ 19,471 $ 37,265 som.utdallas.edu/graduate/mba/fullTimeMba/

Popularity: 100% [?]

Is Social Media Worth Your Time?

December 16th, 2009 by admin No comments »

by Morten Hansen


In the latest issue of Business Week, Stephen Baker’s article “Beware Social Media Snake Oil” makes a provocative argument. He claims that all the hype around social networks, wikis, and blogs for business neglects the potential risks and time wasted. While I think he is overstating the argument, he is bringing up a vital question all managers and employees need to ask: What’s the business value of using social media? In my view, there has to be a crystal clear business impact for using these tools.

Consider collaboration inside companies (which differs from using these tools for marketing and PR). The promise of social media, or “enterprise 2.0″ as it is often called, is that employees can become much better at finding information and working together if they use blogs, wikis, social networking, document sharing, Facebook pages, and the like. But are these new activities valuable for a company? Well, that depends. The first obvious issue is that you can spend an awful lot of time on this, and that’s time not spent doing other things, such as finishing your job for the day. So it’s only valuable if the result (e.g., finding good information) justifies the effort (all the hours put into social media). That’s focusing on outputs, not inputs.

Some people miss this point: They think of adoption success in a company as the number of wikis, blogs, tweets, and Facebook pages that people have created and used. In other words, they measure success as the activity level. But that’s the same as saying, “in our company, we have lots of meetings so we must be doing something right.” As enterprise 2.0 expert Oliver Marks told me, “random Twitter and online dialog can be an even more disastrous use of time than endless unfocused meetings.” More is not necessarily better.

There is a bigger problem, however. Social media tools are only useful for some problems. Managers need to ask, do social media tools solve my key challenges? Consider again collaboration inside companies. Why are people in your company not collaborating better? There are potentially many different reasons for this. As I show in my book Collaboration, some barriers to collaboration are motivational — people are unwilling to share information and look for help, perhaps because they see colleagues as rivals or only care about their own performance. Social media tools are just not going to be good at fixing these motivational problems. You need other solutions for this, such as changing the incentive system so that people are rewarded for helping others.

If you blindly focus on investing in social network tools, wikis, and blogs in your company, without solving these motivational problems first, you have just committed a great managerial sin. You have applied the wrong solution to your problems. You have prescribed cough medicine for a broken leg.

We need to be precise and honest about where these new social media tools have great impact, and where they don’t. Then they will be seen as great tools, and we won’t hear the snake oil label anymore.

blogs.harvardbusiness.org

http://bit.ly/5bJTg0

Popularity: 48% [?]

Applications to Executive MBA Programs Increase

December 15th, 2009 by admin No comments »

Applications to Executive MBA Programs worldwide increased within the last year, while acceptance rates remained stable, according to results of the Executive MBA Council’s 2009 Membership Program Survey.

The Executive MBA Council released partial findings from its annual Membership Program Survey, which offers a comprehensive overview of worldwide programs, at its conference in San Diego, Calif., Monday. Approximately 309 member programs participated in the 2009 Membership Program Survey. Data for the survey was gathered in summer 2009.

The number of applications to an Executive MBA Program on average rose from 83.8 in 2008 to 92.6 in 2009, while the acceptance rate remained the same – 63 percent in both 2008 and 2009. Program size grew from an average of 92 students in 2008 to 96 students in 2009.

“Interest in the Executive MBA continues to remain high,” says George Bobinski, associate dean of the School of Management at Binghamton University and member of the council’s Center for Research. “Programs also are maintaining quality in their admission standards. During this challenging economic time, it’s clear that students are seeing the value of the Executive MBA.”

The survey also noted a small decline in tuition reimbursement by organizations, a trend that has been consistent in the past five years. Worldwide, 30 percent of all Executive MBA students received full reimbursement, compared to 33 percent in 2008; 35 percent received partial reimbursement, compared to 34 percent in 2008; and 37 percent were self-sponsored, compared to 35 percent in 2008.

“Employers are providing some sort of support – whether full or partial – to 69 percent of the students in North America and 61 percent in non-North American locations,” says Jordi Diaz, director of programs at EADA in Barcelona, Spain, and co-chair of the council’s Center for Research. “This helps confirm the importance of the Executive MBA to the organization, as well as to the individual student.”

The council will release additional details from its Membership Program Survey and Student Exit Benchmarking Survey in November.

http://www.emba.org/pdf/pressroom/10_29_2009_programrelease.pdf

Popularity: 59% [?]

The Road to China: Fresh Insights into the World’s Fastest-growing Economy

December 15th, 2009 by admin No comments »

The Road to China: Fresh Insights into the World’s Fastest-growing Economy

Published: December 09, 2009 in Knowledge@Wharton

Earlier this year, Harbir Singh, Wharton’s vice-dean for Global Initiatives, launched a series of trips to foreign countries as a way for faculty to gain a deeper understanding of international economies and then use this knowledge in their teaching and research. Six professors recently visited the Chinese cities of Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen, and met with executives from Lenovo, Haier and Huawei, among other companies. Knowledge@Wharton asked three of the participants – Singh, management professor Saikat Chaudhuri and health care management professor Lawton R. Burns – to share insights from their trip. Below is an edited transcript of the conversation.

Knowledge@Wharton: Harbir, Saikat and Rob, thanks for joining us. Saikat, you mentioned in an earlier conversation that executives you met with are interested in the globalization of Chinese companies, partly through acquisitions, partly through increased outsourcing. Can you talk a little more about this?

Saikat Chaudhuri: Certainly. Chinese companies are, of course, aspiring to become global players. And we actually see a variety of approaches that they’re taking. Haier for example, has taken more of an organic route, even though it did unsuccessfully attempt to buy Maytag. Huawei has also taken an organic route. They had attempted to buy US Robotics or take a stake [in that company], and that was unsuccessful. However, Lenovo is probably the prime example — having bought IBM’s PC business — where [a company] did successfully use the acquisition strategy. And the main reason is that, beyond quick access to markets like the United States and Europe and so forth, they need high-end technologies and also established brands. Those are the elements that the Chinese firms have been missing. And so it fits very well to combine the strong and cost-efficient back end of Chinese firms with the branding, market access and technology that Western developed firms can offer them.

Knowledge@Wharton: Harbir, you and others have noted the role of the Chinese government in creating infrastructure for their economy and its benefit to businesses at large. Can you talk a little bit more about that?

Harbir Singh: I remember in 1997, I was standing on the Bund [in Shanghai] — which was an area where all the various international communities used to be, pre-Communism — and looking across the river at a lot of construction on the other side. People were saying there will be some office towers and businesses here. I was envisioning, maybe, something the size of downtown Philadelphia. When I came back … [and went] to the Grand Hyatt in Pudong, this was a whole new city with large, modern skyscrapers. I was completely amazed at the huge contrast. I’ve been to China many times, but that’s just one illustration.

If you look at Shanghai airport, look at Beijing airport, these are truly world class airports. You have the Maglev train coming into the city. The most populous nation in the world appears to be functioning at a very high gear in these big cities. What that does is create an opportunity for businessmen and executives to develop their products and services in a world class setting. I think that’s the main benefit of infrastructure in terms of electricity, Internet communication and so on. I think that’s been remarkably impressive in China over the years.

Knowledge@Wharton: How does this compare to the situation in India?

Singh: India is a dramatic contrast. I think if you look at India, we have had much less physical infrastructure development in the same period of time. In fact, many projects are underway, but they are moving very slowly. This is something that people in India will also say — so this is, I think, an objective reality. What India has going for it is the development of soft infrastructure — the human capital, the use of the English language which allows service professionals to work with companies around the world. So you have this remarkable contrast. What’s interesting is it doesn’t have to be that one of these major developing nations chooses the hard infrastructure and one chooses soft infrastructure. But for now, that’s what the path has been.

Knowledge@Wharton: Rob, you were able to see first hand the efforts that China is making in the area of health care reform. What exactly are they doing, and are they running into the same obstacles that the U.S. is? That is, finding that you can’t do everything at once and also insure high quality at low cost?

Lawton “Rob” Burns: Yes. First, just to follow up on Harbir’s comments, China is also investing a lot in its health care infrastructure. In particular, they’re rebuilding their hospital industry, which is primarily publicly owned facilities. They’re also rebuilding their primary care system. Basically they didn’t have much of a primary care system. They relied on lower level hospitals to provide primary care, and now they’re trying to build these community health centers. So there’s a massive investment in primary, secondary and tertiary care taking place in China.

What China is discovering is that it has its own version of the “iron triangle” of health care. It’s the issue our country has dealt with for the last 70 to 80 years — trying to balance three conflicting goals of improving quality, improving access and controlling the rate of increase and cost. They’re now discovering the exact same thing. Their health care reform initiatives are designed to provide broader access to health insurance for the population. Yet at the same time, while they provide broader access to improve the level and quality of care, that expands the cost of care. They are trying to figure out ways to control the cost as they increase access to health insurance.

Knowledge@Wharton: Does their government structure make it easier to get these things done than, say, in the U.S.?

Burns: Their government structure is very similar to ours. It’s an incredibly fragmented government bureaucracy with different ministries overseeing different parts of the health care system, with different insurance plans for different segments of the population. And like us, they’re going to try to craft a universal system by basically cobbling together all these different components.

Knowledge@Wharton: By being provided with access to companies and high level executives, Saikat — you mentioned Haier, Lenovo and Huawei — you were able to get insights into things like concerns over social unrest, the pollution problem and efforts to build a knowledge-based economy. What’s the current thinking about how to deal with these issues?

Chaudhuri: Any developing country, and for that matter any developed country, will have challenges because there are inherent trade-offs that must be balanced. That is a very natural outcome of managing conflicting demands as you grow. On the point about building a knowledge-based economy, I think that’s what struck me the most: It’s very interesting because here the contrast with India also becomes apparent. China has strong infrastructure and has been able to build a very strong manufacturing-based economy, whereas India has veered towards the knowledge-based economy. Now, of course, both countries are trying to do the other [approach]. In China’s case, they’re investing a lot of money in trying to set up firms and the appropriate ecosystem to foster innovation. That means venture capital, entrepreneurship and processes which will help to further innovation, because that’s something I think China sometimes suffers from, as far as its image is concerned.

It’s not easy, because building infrastructure is a matter of capital. Building an innovative ecosystem requires several elements to come together [as well as] the exchange of ideas among the right individuals. But I’m confident that given the way China has managed its economic growth so far, this will be a step that they will successfully manage.

Knowledge@Wharton: What about the pollution problem? I’m wondering, Rob, if you could talk about that since it is a health care issue at the same time.

Burns: Yes, it’s a huge public health issue for the Chinese. They have a number of public health challenges. One is pollution, both in the air and in the water. Then you have public health habits. There’s an enormously high smoking rate in China, with very few smoking cessation programs taking place…. What compounds the problem for China is that the public health dollars are disproportionately spent in the urban areas, whereas most of the population lives in the rural areas. So they have a problem with trying to allocate resources to where the problems are.

Singh: One thing I noticed; we were in a very high hotel, I think in Beijing, on the top floor looking out. And we were told that it was one of the clearer days. But I thought it was actually very hard to see any structures around. This is true, as Saikat was saying, for the developing world. It’s the classic problem of how do you grow rapidly and keep these greenhouse gases under control? It seems China is working very hard on it because its own population is putting pressure on the government. But at the same time, clearly there is a lot of work to be done there.

Knowledge@Wharton: Did the issue of social unrest come up in anything that you did or saw over there?

Singh: We had the party secretary of Beijing whom we met allude to that. But it was more in the spirit of one of the factors that he saw in the remote areas. So that was one place where it was specifically raised.

Burns: I think he also mentioned just how important it was to try to contain any social unrest and the importance of stability in keeping this economic engine going forward.

Chaudhuri: In one sense, you could just say it’s about managing diversity. China’s a big country with a huge population and they have many different types of people with varied interests. It’s about meeting the aspirations of those people and managing the differences, as much as it is promoting some uniformity in a standard of living.

Knowledge@Wharton: During your trip, you all indicated that Chinese officials made it very clear the U.S. is to blame for the financial crisis. They talked about providing a different model. What is that model and how successful do you think it can be?

Chaudhuri: I suppose that one way to look at the alternative model is perhaps not as unbridled capitalism, but with selective intervention and some controls. This is, of course, the debate that’s been going on around the world in countries which thought that they had perfected the model, such as the United States, but also the European countries. So it’s a wider debate. I would see it as not yet being established what is working, because we have some confounding factors here. So you could attribute the success in managing the crisis to a particular system in the emerging markets. But you could also attribute it to the inherently higher growth rates that they have been experiencing due to the rise that they’ve had over the last several years and the tremendous domestic demand and other factors driving it. I do think it’s good food for thought and should fuel the debate so that we can come up with appropriate structures globally to avoid such crises in the future. It’s not yet evident to me what exactly the model might be, though, and perhaps where the balance may lie.

Singh: Also, one of the things referred do was the impact of derivatives on the U.S. economy and the decline of many of the financial valuations and portfolios of banks and other institutions. I think because [other economies] have less exposure to derivatives and other exotic instruments, there was a sense that [not having them] … was helpful. I hear similar comments in India where people say that the central reserve bank actually had put certain limits on derivatives, so many of these mortgage-backed securities and all those exotic instruments were not allowed to be traded in India. Now does that mean that there’s a better policy? Well, that’s a whole different question. But maybe it speaks to some degree of conservatism which, in this case, was helpful.

Knowledge@Wharton: President Obama recently returned from a visit to China where he encountered efforts to restrict public access to him, and also came in for some blunt criticism over the weak U.S. dollar and low interest rates. In addition, the Chinese accused the U.S. of protectionist trade policies because of their actions against some Chinese products like steel pipes and coated paper. Do you have a response to this lecture that Obama got? And do you think it signals a worsening of relations between the two countries?

Singh: There’s a high degree of dependence between both economies. That’s absolutely clear. One of the questions that is divisive among many is the yuan and where it is pegged in the international markets. Given that China is the manufacturing hub of the world, one of the interesting questions is, if you revalue the yuan, what happens to the costs of those products in the economies where they’re being exported? This is one of the more complex issues underlying the debate, and it’s not clear what the right answer is. But the dependence is so great that this is going to be an ongoing debate.

So on one hand, perhaps, [there are] exhortations to revalue the Yuan; on the other hand, [there are] arguments that we are protecting our products. They’re both interlinked.

Burns: You know, just to add to it in the health care arena, the interesting development there is that the Chinese are undertaking health care reform at the same time we’re undertaking health care reform. I don’t think it’s any longer the case that we have lessons to offer other countries. Other countries are now saying, ‘We have lessons to offer you.’

Knowledge@Wharton: Okay, good point. Saikat, you noted that a whole generation of Chinese has seen progress now for about the last 30 years, and that a lot of overseas Chinese are, in fact, going back to China, not just senior people, but junior people, too. Do you think that will continue? And what are they going back to?

Chaudhuri: We talk about the so-called reverse brain drain — nowadays it’s known as brain gain — both in the context of China and in India. I think in China’s case it started earlier and the scale is also a bit higher. As you noted, what was particularly impressive is that it’s not only the senior people who go into senior roles, especially at multinational corporations based in China who are now taking this opportunity, but it’s also the junior people. We see this increasingly here at Wharton as well. That signals to me very, very clearly that the opportunities are there to actually build a career. Earlier I was talking about building the right ecosystem for a knowledge-based economy. The infrastructure, the people, are of course a critical element. So beyond building the hard infrastructure, to get the right mentality, mindset, it’s very, very critical for China to get back some of that talent which has gained experience abroad. Undoubtedly, they’ve become very, very attractive as a destination. So I think it’s a very, very important driver.

If I may also note, the entrepreneurs that we spoke to were, to a large extent, also of that type. They can, of course, appropriately take business models from both sides, blend them and find what is unique, both for domestic purposes but also to build new global players. So what’s happening on that front is a very, very important driver of China’s future aspirations to become an entrepreneurship and knowledge-based economy.

Singh: One thing that I noted with respect to people going back to China and to India is that the rates seem to be increasing every year; this suggests the perception of opportunity that our recent graduates see in those economies. That’s the first point, that opportunity is rising in some kind of very visceral way, because people are voting with their feet. But the second is that we met seasoned entrepreneurs who had moved 10 years ago, 15 years ago, and they saw confirmation of their projections early on. I think the idea of the ecosystem is very interesting, because they were in, some sense, the creators of the ecosystem which now these young recent graduates are getting into. Related to that, we had the Wharton Alumni Forum not too long ago in China. There were over 700 alumni, many of whom were coming from other countries.

Knowledge@Wharton: What were some of the more impressive business practices or products that you saw in the firms you visited?

Burns: I don’t know about the most impressive practices. I think the most impressive thing I’m seeing is the huge set of demand drivers that are going to accelerate the Chinese health care economy. The projections are stunning that within maybe 30 years China will be the largest pharmaceutical market in the world, eclipsing the United States. That’s stunning to everybody who studied the pharmaceutical industry. And the same thing may happen with medical devices, too.

Singh: What I found fascinating about China were two things. One was scale and the rapid rate of growth. There’s no question that it may not be a linear path, but it’s going to be a major large market in almost every industry. But the other part that I found interesting is when we went to Lenovo and the head of product development for Lenovo was talking about the role of the company’s North Carolina facility, the role of its Japan facility and the Beijing facility, and how they all work together, around the clock as it were, but with a lot of face to face interaction. So they’re trying to grapple with the issue of how to work across borders.

I was sitting in the conference room saying, “This conference room could easily be in Silicon Valley or in Raleigh, North Carolina. But it happens to be in Beijing.” And he was saying the same thing. He often doesn’t know which part of the world he is in. So Lenovo has, on the product development side, created a global organization.

Chaudhuri: To build on that a bit further, I think new forms of organization are being experimented with and being designed and promoted by these firms. Harbir mentioned Lenovo. They have interaction to allow for 24 hour development cycles, yet at the same time [allow] expertise in certain pockets to be developed and to be globally applied. I think that applies to the emerging markets.

I can’t help but be reminded of when the Korean and Japanese economies really took off and those firms rose to prominence. They also brought interesting new management practices, such as in the area of supply chain management. I believe that firms like Lenovo or Haier or Huawei will contribute at that level as well, [along with] Brazilian and Indian and other emerging market firms.


Popularity: 38% [?]

Countries Compete for Foreign Student

November 16th, 2009 by admin No comments »

Two articles in The Chronicle for Higher Education today reflect on the growing number of students coming to the US for undergraduate and graduate studies.  It was noted that in 2008, the United States had 671,616 students studying from abroad.  While that number should probably be moved to around 533,203 when you exclude the ESL students, it still represents a 7.7% increase over 2007.  This against the backdrop of the world wide recession.  That 7.7% growth rate is the largest of the four leading destinations for higher education.  While Britain’s 341,790 students is trememdous given the relative size of the homegrown population, the growth and absolute number of students in the US is remarkable.

India and China account for more than 45 percent of all foreign student enrolled in the American graduate schools in 2008.  While the current job climate in the US is diminishing its apeal, it is still the number one destination for students looking to study abroad.

While the growth rate from India was down from previous years, China witnessed a 60% increase in the number of undergraduate students and a 21 percent increase overall.

Top Countries of Origin of Foreign Students in the United States, 2008-9

Number of
international
students
1-year
change
1 India 103,260 9.2%
2 China 98,235 21.1%
3 South Korea 75,065 8.6%
4 Canada 29,697 2.2%
5 Japan 29,264 -13.9%
6 Taiwan 28,065 -3.2%
7 Mexico 14,850 0.1%
8 Turkey 13,263 10.2%
9 Vietnam 12,823 46.2%
10 Saudi Arabia 12,661 28.2%
11 Nepal 11,581 29.6%
12 Germany 9,679 8.7%
13 Brazil 8,767 15.7%
14 Thailand 8,736 -3.0%
15 Britain 8,701 4.0%
16 Hong Kong 8,329 0.5%
17 Indonesia 7,509 -2.4%
18 France 7,421 5.3%
19 Colombia 7,013 5.3%
20 Nigeria 6,256 0.5%
Source: Institute of International Education

Popularity: 41% [?]

MBA In A Hurry

November 9th, 2009 by admin No comments »

The Wall Street Journal recently release its rankings of accelerated MBA programs.   The statistic of who is attending is revealing:

Student Profile

People in accelerated M.B.A. programs,

Median Age: 29

U.S. citizens: 25%

Gender:  75% male / 25% femail

Median years of mangement experience: 2 years

Median pre-M.B.A. salary: $55,000

Median post-M.B.A. salary: $90,000

Percentage who said they got a promotion post M.B.A.: 78%

Percentage who said they were in the same industry both pre- and post- M.B.A.:  95%

(all information from Wall Street Journal article)

The most interesting aspect of these findings are the last point, 95% of people attending these accelerated programs stay in theri same industry and 78% say they got promoted.

Popularity: 45% [?]