Monday, April 20, 2009
Get the Conversation Started
P.P.S. Maybe we can arrange a chat between Africans returned to Africa and those thinking of returning...Shall we?
Who will get us started? Some of us can't wait to hear...
Sunday, April 12, 2009
Work to Love
From an opinion piece in the New York Times. Read More...In the bubble decade, making money as an end in itself boomed as a calling among students at elite universities like Harvard, siphoning off gifted undergraduates who might otherwise have been scientists, teachers, doctors, entrepreneurs, artists or inventors. The Harvard Crimson reported that in the class of 2007, 58 percent of the men and 43 percent of the women entering the work force took jobs in the finance and consulting industries. The figures were similar everywhere, from Duke to the University of Pennsylvania. Dan Rather, on his HDNet television program in December, reported that at Penn this was even true of “over half the students who graduated with engineering degrees — not a field commonly associated with Wall Street.”
Clearly the last person to serve as an inspiring role model for alternative values would have been Summers. But in her first baccalaureate address last June, his successor as Harvard president, Drew Gilpin Faust, stepped into that moral vacuum, zeroing in on the huge number of students heading into finance, consulting and investment banking. “Find work you love,” she implored the class of 2008. The “most remunerative” job choice “may not be the most meaningful and the most satisfying.”
This same note was hit a month earlier by the commencement speaker at Wesleyan University, Barack Obama. “The big house and the nice suits and all the other things that our money culture says you should buy,” he said, amount to “a poverty of ambition.” He wasn’t speaking idly. As America knows, Obama turned down the lucrative career path guaranteed to the first African-American president of The Harvard Law Review to pursue the missions of service and teaching instead. The potential rewards for our country, now that that early choice has led him into the White House, are enormous.
But it’s hardly a given that the entrenched money culture has evaporated along with the paper profits it generated. One skeptic is Howard Gardner, the Harvard education professor who has created seminars at several elite colleges to counsel students in the notion of pursuing meaningful, ethical and effective work — “Good Work,” as he has titled it. He believes that many students may still be operating on the assumption that the world of finance will just pick up where it left off in a few years. “But we’re not going to be back there,” Gardner told me last week, “and we shouldn’t be back there.”
He notes that while the New Deal was built from ideas developed in the Progressive Era and that the Reagan counterrevolution was the culmination of the conservative movement of the 1950s and ’60s, there is as yet “no counternarrative to replace ‘money is king.’ ” The post-crash influx of graduates into Teach for America, while laudable, may be transitory unless there’s the political vision and leadership to make altruistic values stick after our crisis has passed. “It’s completely up in the air what’s going to happen,” Gardner said.
“In choosing careers, young people look for signals from society, and Wall Street will no longer pull the talent that it did for so many years,” said Richard Freeman, director of the labor studies program at the National Bureau of Economic Research. “We have a great experiment before us.”
What will the new map of talent flow look like? It’s early, but based on graduate school applications this spring, enrollment in undergraduate courses, preliminary job-placement results at schools, and the anecdotal accounts of students and professors, a new pattern of occupational choice seems to be emerging. Public service, government, the sciences and even teaching look to be winners, while fewer shiny, young minds are embarking on careers in finance and business consulting.
For the highest-paid business fields, the outlook is for a tempering correction instead of an all-out exodus. At Harvard, for example, about 40 percent of undergraduates in recent years went into the most lucrative corporate arenas like finance and consulting, based on surveys at the school year’s end. “That certainly won’t be the case this year,” observed Lawrence Katz, a professor and labor economist who has studied undergraduate career choices at Harvard going back to the 1960s. “We’re seeing students who would have been part of the Ivy League pipeline to Wall Street in the past considering very different career paths.”
Kedamai Fisseha, a 21-year-old senior, is one of them. An economics major, Mr. Fisseha says he always assumed he would go into finance, and his summer internship last year was at the investment bank Morgan Stanley. Yet after Wall Street’s meltdown, job prospects there have withered. Instead, he is interviewing with Teach for America, a nonprofit group that recruits college graduates to teach in hard-to-staff schools for two-year stints. (After that, only one-third stay in the classrooms, though two-thirds remain in education.)
Mr. Fisseha regards the turn of events as an opportunity to broaden his horizons. “It’s been liberating, and lucky for me,” he said. “But your situation does dictate your preferences.”
Graduate schools of government and public policy are seeing a surge of applications. In a survey of its members released last week, the National Association of Schools of Public Affairs and Administration found that 82 percent reported an increase in applications this year, and many saw the largest percentage jumps in several years, or ever. The most-cited reason was the expectation by students that government will be hiring.
Still, the appeal of public sector careers extends beyond job openings, say school officials. The laissez-faire presumption that government is not the solution but the problem, dating back to the Reagan era, has been cast aside, they say.
The government’s need to step in with financial bailouts and recovery programs to steady the economy is seen as the immediate proof, they say, but not the only one. The environment, energy and health care also pose huge, complex challenges. “Young people today understand that government has a powerful role to play in solving these problems,” said Sandra Archibald, dean of the Evans School of Public Affairs at the University of Washington, where applications this year are up 26 percent.
Government school officials also point to an Obama effect: his election as an endorsement of government activism.
From "With Finance Disgraced, Which Career Will Be King?" Read More...
Well, there's always Nigeria etc. In Africa there's raw talent. There's high population. There are problems. There is a great need for competence in several fields. There is low-hanging fruit, so you can with little effort make a huge impact. There's often not the huge pay that you can expect in the West, although that can be arranged sometimes. It's worth a try.
P.S. Ask me about my own time in Nigeria (July 2008-July 2009) sometime.
P.P.S. Maybe we can arrange a chat between Africans returned to Africa and those thinking of returning...Shall we?
Previously on UpNaira
-
►
2024
(21)
- ► December 2024 (1)
- ► November 2024 (2)
- ► October 2024 (1)
- ► September 2024 (1)
- ► August 2024 (1)
- ► April 2024 (4)
- ► March 2024 (2)
- ► February 2024 (1)
- ► January 2024 (3)
-
►
2023
(34)
- ► December 2023 (4)
- ► November 2023 (1)
- ► October 2023 (3)
- ► September 2023 (3)
- ► August 2023 (3)
- ► April 2023 (3)
- ► March 2023 (1)
- ► February 2023 (6)
- ► January 2023 (1)
-
►
2022
(21)
- ► December 2022 (1)
- ► November 2022 (1)
- ► October 2022 (4)
- ► September 2022 (1)
- ► August 2022 (3)
- ► April 2022 (1)
- ► March 2022 (1)
- ► February 2022 (1)
- ► January 2022 (3)
-
►
2021
(33)
- ► December 2021 (1)
- ► November 2021 (1)
- ► October 2021 (4)
- ► September 2021 (4)
- ► August 2021 (1)
- ► April 2021 (1)
- ► March 2021 (4)
- ► February 2021 (4)
- ► January 2021 (2)
-
►
2020
(37)
- ► December 2020 (3)
- ► November 2020 (2)
- ► October 2020 (2)
- ► September 2020 (3)
- ► August 2020 (5)
- ► April 2020 (2)
- ► March 2020 (1)
- ► February 2020 (3)
- ► January 2020 (6)
-
►
2019
(43)
- ► December 2019 (4)
- ► November 2019 (3)
- ► October 2019 (5)
- ► September 2019 (4)
- ► August 2019 (2)
- ► April 2019 (4)
- ► March 2019 (4)
- ► February 2019 (3)
- ► January 2019 (4)
-
►
2018
(52)
- ► December 2018 (2)
- ► November 2018 (5)
- ► October 2018 (4)
- ► September 2018 (3)
- ► August 2018 (6)
- ► April 2018 (6)
- ► March 2018 (4)
- ► February 2018 (3)
- ► January 2018 (5)
-
►
2017
(51)
- ► December 2017 (4)
- ► November 2017 (1)
- ► October 2017 (7)
- ► September 2017 (3)
- ► August 2017 (6)
- ► April 2017 (3)
- ► March 2017 (4)
- ► February 2017 (5)
- ► January 2017 (2)
-
►
2016
(70)
- ► December 2016 (4)
- ► November 2016 (3)
- ► October 2016 (5)
- ► September 2016 (5)
- ► August 2016 (6)
- ► April 2016 (6)
- ► March 2016 (12)
- ► February 2016 (7)
- ► January 2016 (7)
-
►
2015
(45)
- ► December 2015 (5)
- ► November 2015 (6)
- ► October 2015 (3)
- ► September 2015 (3)
- ► August 2015 (5)
- ► April 2015 (7)
- ► March 2015 (2)
- ► February 2015 (1)
- ► January 2015 (6)
-
►
2014
(41)
- ► December 2014 (3)
- ► November 2014 (2)
- ► October 2014 (3)
- ► September 2014 (2)
- ► August 2014 (4)
- ► April 2014 (4)
- ► March 2014 (4)
- ► February 2014 (7)
- ► January 2014 (6)
-
►
2013
(34)
- ► December 2013 (2)
- ► November 2013 (1)
- ► October 2013 (2)
- ► September 2013 (3)
- ► August 2013 (1)
- ► April 2013 (3)
- ► March 2013 (5)
- ► February 2013 (2)
- ► January 2013 (5)
-
►
2012
(38)
- ► December 2012 (7)
- ► November 2012 (4)
- ► October 2012 (2)
- ► September 2012 (4)
- ► August 2012 (3)
- ► April 2012 (3)
- ► March 2012 (4)
- ► February 2012 (3)
- ► January 2012 (3)
-
►
2011
(54)
- ► December 2011 (4)
- ► November 2011 (3)
- ► October 2011 (3)
- ► September 2011 (4)
- ► August 2011 (2)
- ► April 2011 (3)
- ► March 2011 (1)
- ► February 2011 (6)
- ► January 2011 (8)
-
►
2010
(91)
- ► December 2010 (14)
- ► November 2010 (9)
- ► October 2010 (4)
- ► September 2010 (7)
- ► August 2010 (4)
- ► April 2010 (8)
- ► March 2010 (9)
- ► February 2010 (5)
- ► January 2010 (6)
-
▼
2009
(34)
- ► December 2009 (4)
- ► November 2009 (7)
- ► October 2009 (2)
- ► September 2009 (5)
- ► August 2009 (4)
- ► March 2009 (2)
- ► February 2009 (2)
- ► January 2009 (2)
-
►
2008
(42)
- ► December 2008 (3)
- ► November 2008 (1)
- ► October 2008 (4)
- ► September 2008 (1)
- ► August 2008 (1)
- ► April 2008 (6)
- ► March 2008 (6)
- ► February 2008 (1)
- ► January 2008 (2)
-
►
2007
(62)
- ► December 2007 (4)
- ► November 2007 (1)
- ► October 2007 (3)
- ► September 2007 (4)
- ► August 2007 (3)
- ► April 2007 (9)
- ► March 2007 (13)
- ► February 2007 (4)
- ► January 2007 (3)
-
►
2006
(24)
- ► December 2006 (1)
- ► November 2006 (3)
- ► October 2006 (1)
- ► September 2006 (1)
- ► August 2006 (2)
- ► April 2006 (1)
- ► March 2006 (4)
- ► February 2006 (1)
- ► January 2006 (1)
-
►
2005
(33)
- ► December 2005 (2)
- ► November 2005 (5)
- ► October 2005 (2)
- ► September 2005 (3)
- ► August 2005 (5)