qui tacet consentire videtur

love, liberty, and economics

June 28th, 2008

Thoughts on the St Gallen Symposium


Climbing a mountain with Price Waterhouse Coopers (Mt. Santis, St Gallen)

1. An incredible experience

SGS is truly the best student conference I’ve ever experienced, and I’ve been to quite a few of them. I met the most amazing people there – networking opportunities abound – including Nitin from NextBillion. Naturally Geoffrey was there charming the ladies in his bespoke suit.

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June 8th, 2008

Business Today International Conference 2008

Forbidden City Mao Zedong
That’s a… different kind of leadership (Forbidden City, Beijing)

So I get to stay at the Marriott again:

CONGRATULATIONS! You have been accepted to the 34th Annual International Conference, “The Dynamics of Leadership: Transformation and Innovation in the 21st Century” held at the Marriott Marquis in Times Square, New York City from November 22nd-25th. Out of over 1,100 applicants, you have been selected to participate in our all-expenses paid affair. The applicant pool was outstanding, with over 100 schools and 30 countries being represented. The conference will be a phenomenal experience as you now have the opportunity to meet over seventy CEOs from across the United States in small seminars and explore New York City with fellow students from all over the world. Get ready to break down Harvard Business School case studies with your peers, discuss crucial topics in politics, business, and entrepreneurship, meet recruiters from top companies, and have an overall incredible experience! To give you an idea of the types of executives you will meet, I’ve attached a list of executives who have participated in our programs over the past year.

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May 20th, 2008

Thoughts on Zettai Kareshi and Japanese gender roles

Tokyo subway female car
Separate but equal? (Tokyo Metro)

Zettai Kareshi (絶対彼氏) / Absolute Boyfriend
Fuji TV Spring 2008 season

I find it strange that I like Zettai Kareshi so much. Although I love the romantic comedy genre of j-dramas (as opposed to the melodramas) in general, I can’t help but be reminded of the horrible conclusion that the title is everything that I am not. I’ve only seen the first few episodes since the summer started while stuck in airports and planes without in-flight entertainment, but here are some initial thoughts on the series:

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March 6th, 2008

Going to St Gallen

I’m going to Switzerland.

On behalf of the International Students’ Committee (ISC), we would like to cordially thank you for your excellent contribution to this year’s St. Gallen Wings of Excellence Award. We are very delighted about the challenge you have undertaken when working on the topic “Global Capitalism - Local Values”. In the past few weeks the jury has thoroughly evaluated the around 1,000 entries in order to choose those 200 students who will be invited to the 38th St. Gallen Symposium.

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March 4th, 2008

The Rising Sons of Japan’s Family Firms

Ghibli museum Laputa robot
(Ghibli Museum Mitaka, Tokyo) Whose children can best pilot the Japanese economic machine?

I attended a Weatherhead institute seminar on the ownership and board structure of Japanese family firms by Prof. Yupana Wiwattanakantang from Hitotsubashi University, hosted by b-school Center on Japanese Economy and Business director Hugh Patrick. I actually had the opportunity to visit Hitotsubashi while I was in Tokyo this winter, where I stayed with my friend and co-JFTC-winner Dyna in his Economics RA office. Prof. Yupana presented her a working paper on the performance of family firms in Japan, which I found quite fascinating.

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March 2nd, 2008

The road to the BOP

Bank of Japan and a Japanese banker
(Bank of Japan, Tokyo) I walk this empty street/ On the Boulevard of Broken Dreams/ Where the city sleeps/ I’m the only one and I walk alone/

In one of those cosmic accidents, my seat at the alumni LNY dinner was right next to someone who shares all my personal and academic interests (development, asia, microfinance, social enterprise, BOP etc), we have the same major and concentrations, we have the same career aspirations and life goals, and we even watch the same dramas. Over the course of some two hours of on-and-off conversation, the coincidences became somewhat eerie.

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February 10th, 2008

Interviewing with ViD

In retrospect it was probably a bad idea to leave interview preparation for ViD and FACES to the last minute. After pouring out my heart and soul to the University of St. Gallen and the GSGLP selection committee, I’m just too drained to reflect on such philosophical questions as “tell me about yourself”, “what would you say is your greatest weakness”, “what is something special about you that isn’t in your application”, and “how many piano tuners are there in New York City”. That and the fact that my heart was beating like a jackhammer may have contributed to a less than positive interview experience.

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December 28th, 2007

Winter J-drama binge

My winter break on campus is dedicated to essays, applications, self-study, and exercise - which I had been diligent about all summer but neglected completely during the term. Now that the dorms are empty, I have the gym all to myself, and I intend to make full use of it. Gotta get back in shape, mens sana in corpore sano and all that. Now every muscle in my body aches. But I can’t be working all the time, so to prepare for my long-awaited Tokyo adventure, I am immersing myself in a semester’s backlog of j-dramas. All k-dramas and c-dramas have been put on hold. Here’s what I’m watching:

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November 18th, 2007

The people who inspire me

As I wonder where my life is going, I look to where others ahead of me have been. I love reading the profiles of the incoming Lauder class of 2009, or Columbia’s Chazen fellows, or the 2008 Acumen fellows, or the Echoing Green fellows, because their life stories chart paths of achievement that inform not just where one can go, but how to get there step by step. I was inspired by Rory Stewart’s ‘extreme MBA‘ in postconflict Afghanistan in the new HBR issue. But at the same time, these role models seem so far ahead of me that it is sometimes hard to see how I could follow in their footsteps. Their first steps are like marathons for me.

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November 16th, 2007

Business Today International Conference approaches

I will be attending the BT International Conference at the Hyatt this weekend. As it turns out, Geoffrey and I are in the same case study group (Starbucks). Unfortunately, with my various papers due today and my takehome midterm and problem sets to do, it is unlikely that I will be an asset to the group because I don’t have time to research anything on Starbucks… but I have been assigned to some of the best executive seminars!

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