Showing posts with label China Europe International Business School. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China Europe International Business School. Show all posts

Monday, October 07, 2013

What can China learn from Singapore on sustainability? - China Weekly Hangout

Richard Brubaker
Sustainable development expert and CEIBS adjunct professor +Richard Brubaker has spent six weeks in Singapore and was impressed by the progress the city-state has made in developing sustainable practices. On Thursday the +China Weekly Hangout will ask him what lessons China can learn from Singapore. At this Google+ pages your will find reports about some projects he visited (including a great video on vertical farming)

Join us in our weekly China discussion on Thursday 10 October at 10pm Beijing times, 4pm CEST (Europe) and 10am EST (US/Canada). You can register at our event page.
You can leave you questions in the comments or ask them live during the hangout at our event page.
China Weekly Hangout

Last week the +China Weekly Hangout discussed the Shanghai Free Trade Zone. +Steve Barru, +李洛傑 and +Fons Tuinstra  wrapped one week of news on Shanghai's Free Trade Zone, and end in a not-so positive mood about what this new zone is actually going to do.



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Saturday, May 04, 2013

How to pitch your China book to a publisher - Paul French

Paul French
Paul French
Award winning author Paul French explains how to pitch your China book to publishers, and - even more important -  which books on China you might as well not write anymore, for the Asia Society

The Asia Society Blog:
1. Build your book around a specific topic, rather than China in general. "More depth, less breadth." 
2. Focus on "bottom-up analysis," rather than the "3,000-feet view of China from the airplane." "People are much more interested in what people are doing on the ground." 
3. Take a more nuanced approach, because China is not as alien to the average reader as it once was. "The idea that you can just do a book that's called Doing Business in China is probably passed now." 
4. Write about Chinese lives. "Memoirs of expatriates and foreigners who lived in china … are just not selling." 
5. Try rapid-response publishing. "China is always a fast-moving target. Waiting around a year-and-a-half or two years or more for a book to come out … just isn't the way things work anymore."
More on the Asia Society Blog.

Paul French is an author on the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch or fill in our speakers' request form.

Weekly China Hangout

Apart from writing a book, you can of course also join our China Weekly Hangout now and then, to give your comments and pave your road to fame. Like our April broadcast on the bird flu in China with flu expert +Harm Kiezebrink from Beijing, HKU-lecturer +Paul Fox from Hong Kong and CEIBS adjunct professor +Richard Brubaker from Shanghai. We try to figure out what is happening with N7H9, and what possible scenario's can develop. And we discuss what the Chinese government has learn from SARS, now ten years ago. Moderation by +Fons Tuinstra of the +China Speakers Bureau.
  The China Weekly Hangout is holding on May 9 an open office, where you can discuss current affairs in China or suggest subjects for hangouts later this year. You can read our announcement here, orregister for the hangout here.  
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Thursday, January 31, 2013

Education: goldmine or black hole? - China Weekly Hangout

English: A group of students - International E...
English: A group of students - International Education College of the Xinjiang Medical University (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Good education has been high on the agenda for many Chinese parents, and often they looked at foreign institutions to send their children to, rather than the rather traditional Chinese schools. Initially, the focus was on universities, but increasingly Chinese kids have started to attend also foreign boarding schools, to prepare them for a prestigious university abroad.

The China Weekly Hangout will ask on February 7 if education for Chinese is a goldmine or black hole, and for who. What might be the best strategy for both potential students, their parents and aspiring educational institutions, trying to tap into the China market?

The playing field is diverse, as are the interests at stake. China has been an important recruiting ground for foreign universities since the country started to open up economically. Some US universities now have 40-50% Chinese students, while some Australian universities at times recorded more than 90% Chinese students.
That has an adverse effect on recruitment, because when Chinese opt for foreign education, they do not expect an all-Chinese university, even when it is based in Australia.
Reversely, many universities have set up campuses in China. Initially mainly business schools, but more are moving into China and - for example - the NYU is planning a huge expansion after opening a first campus in Shanghai. While those domestic solutions of international schools are more affordable for students who cannot afford an international study, they have been met with distrust, as many potential students did not believe the China campus of prestigious universities would have the same quality and international exposure as the original Alma Mater.
Switzerland, as we reported earlier this week, would focus rather on high quality and the offspring of China's millionaires, rather than setting up another mainstream mass production line for university talents.
And then there is the dilemma for the students themselves: employment opportunities abroad have diminished with the financial crisis, and returning back to China does not give them jobs allowing them to pay back loans for study abroad. Even getting a job in China is hard, as they have to compete with domestically educated graduates. Some international Chinese students had to write off their investment in their education. Many Chinese students in the US end up studying for a PhD in the US, the academic edition of cheap labor, without perspective on a real job.

During our previous China Weekly Hangout we discussed failing foreign firms in China, with Richard Brubaker, who is currently teaching at the China Europe International Business School (CEIBS) in Shanghai and Andrew Hupert, who used to teach at the NYU campus in Shanghai. Both will try to attend this upcoming hangout too, but we love to get more perspectives in. Are you a (potential) Chinese student, are you working for one of the educational institutions, are you a parent thinking of sending you kid abroad, and you want to have a say, register here at our event page.

The China Weekly Hangout on education for China and the Chinese will take place on February 7, 10pm Beijing Time, 3pm CET (Europe) and 9pm EST (US/Canada). We can host a maximum of nine guests, but others can send remarks and questions in the comments here and during the event at our event page.

Is it your first time on Google+ Hangout and you want to have a test to see if all your systems are working? Drop us a line. 

Here is the previous China Weekly Hangout, on Failing ForeignFirms in China.


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Friday, November 16, 2012

Nuclear power in China (reprise) - China Weekly Hangout

Fukushima mahnt: ALLE AKW's ABSCHALTEN! Großde...
A German demo against nuclear power last year (Photo credit: quapan)
The China Weekly Hangout of coming Thursday 22 November will focus on nuclear power in China, and the likelihood increasing NIMBY protests might derail that ambitious energy program. The hangout was delayed from  November 8 (see here the initial announcement) as we unfortunately forgot to take into account the change in daylight saving time in the US and missed our panelists.
This time, we are sure we can welcome Chris Brown and Richard Brubaker, and perhaps a few other guests for another session on China's energy security.
We plan to hold two session of 15 minutes each, one about the current state of nuclear power in China, a second on the effect of NIMBY protest against nuclear plants.
A good overview is available here.
The China Weekly Hangout will be held at 10pm Beijing Time, 3pm CET (Europe) and 9pm EST (US/Canada).
You can join our China Weekly Hangout by visiting our event page and register. You can watch the YouTube link here at this post and at our event page, ten minutes before the start of the hangout. A full overview of earlier editions, you can get here.

Chris Brown
Chris Brown is general manager for Asia Cleantech Gateway North America. A former US government China-Central Asia policy analyst, intelligence officer, Taiwan radio personality. Habs and Arsenal Fan. Working to develop China-US clean energy business ties, mostly solar but hoping to expand to wind. Live in Brooklyn but originally from Spokane, WA.







Richard Brubaker is adjunct professor of Management, Sustainability and Responsible Leadership at China Europe International Business School (CEIBS) and editor of AllWaysLeadtoChina. He is based in Shanghai.
With almost 20 years of Asia experience (the last 10 based in mainland China), Rich assists his clients (both Fortune 500 companies and SMEs) in understanding the China market, determining their own China platform and implementing effective strategies.
Rich has a Masters in International Management from Thunderbird, The Garvin School of International Management and a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration, majoring in Finance and Economics, from the University of Missouri.
Rich is the Vice Chairman of the Corporate Social Responsibility Committee of the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai, sits on the Asia Pacific Council of the Thunderbird Alumni Association, and is an active member of RotaryAct.
Moderator is Fons Tuinstra, president of the China Speakers Bureau.


China Weekly Hangout on nuclear power

Will the growing NIMBY movement in China stop the nuclear ambitions?

Last month we organized a first China Weekly Hangout, focusing on solar and wind energy, with Terry Cooke, Richard Brubaker and Fons Tuinstra.


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Thursday, November 01, 2012

Why China is heading for a crisis - Wang Jianmao

Wang Jianmao
Wang Jianmao
Bulls and bears are out in full force on China. CEIBS Professor Wang Jianmao warns in NHPR for the danger of complacency after three decades of growth, where the word crisis has been eliminated from the dictionary.

NHPR:
Wang Jianmao of the China Europe International Business School says some companies keep producing and producing as though China's boom will never end. "Because of the huge success of the past three decades, I have to say, made some Chinese people very arrogant," says Wang. "They take this fast growth just for granted. They don't believe China will have a crisis. The problem is: If you don't believe you will have a crisis, you will have a crisis."
More in NHPR.

Professor Wang Jianmao is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch or fill in our speakers' request form.

On Thursday November 1 the China Weekly Hangout will focus on eight years of harmonious society under Hu Jintao and what we can expect the next eight years under Xi Jinping. Including Janet Carmosky who will report on the findings during the National Committee on US-China Relations China Town Hall on Monday. The CWH is held on 10pm Beijing time, 3pm CET (Europe) and 10pm EST (US). More on the logistics of the hangout later this week at the China Herald or our event page at Google+.
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Monday, June 25, 2012

Who will employ six million new graduates? - Wang Jianmao

Wang Jianmao
This month China will have six million university graduates more. The world looks at the figure in awe, but the graduates themselves have problem: will they find a job? Professor Wang Jianmao of CEIBS thinks they might, if economic restructuring works out, he tells in The National. 

The National:
But under a "soft landing", will China still be the job-generating machine it has been in the past for new graduates? 
"If the 7 or 8 per cent growth is mainly driven by investment, the answer is no. If the 7 or 8 per cent growth is driven by consumption, the answer is yes, it's enough to generate the jobs," said Wang Jianmao, a professor at the China Europe International Business School in Shanghai. 
The "real change" to a consumption-driven economy, as opposed to one that relies on exports, will take place "in a few years", he adds. 
In the current economic climate, many graduates will probably have to settle for jobs that would not traditionally be considered as suitable for those with a university degree.
More in The National.

Wang Jianmao is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch or fill in our speakers' request form.  
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Friday, January 20, 2012

Inflation still a problem - Wang Jianmao

Wang Jianmao
The debate between economists on how China should deal with its economy is running high. CEIBS professor Wang Jianmao warns in the US edition of the China Daily curtailing inflation should be high on the agenda, not loosening the financial strings on banks.

The China Daily:
Many economists now expect further loosening of the bank's reserve requirement ratio (RRR) in the first half of the year - allowing more credit back into the banking system - and then for interest rates to start being cut in the second half of the year. 
Wang Jianmao, professor of economics at the China Europe International Business School (CEIBS) in Shanghai, worries the government has not quite put the inflation genie back in the bottle and cautions about loosening monetary policy. 
He believes if the government pursues a policy of relaxing the RRR, it should actually also raise interest rates as a precaution. 
"I think any lowering of the Triple R and an increase in interest rates would be a very bad combination. I think the government needs to increase interest rates at the same time so we don't have a problem with inflation," he says.
More in the US edition of the China Daily

Professor Wang Jianmao is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need him at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch or fill in our speakers' request form.
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