Posts Tagged ‘South Korea’

The Week Unpeeled

The world did not end last week but the year did begin to wind down amid a bit of doomsday-style headlines with the fiscal cliff issue (or is it Merry Cliffmas, referenced in a few publications, this year?) unresolved and NRA press conference quotes going global. (“The only thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is a good buy with a gun” blared across The Times in London and beyond on Saturday.)

Elsewhere:

  • Reports that Ben Affleck may be the Senate candidate to fill the spot most likely left vacant in Massachusetts following John Kerry’s nomination as Secretary of State;
  • UBS agreed to pay approximately $1.5 billion in fines for key rate rigging that was called “routine” (coverage was anything but routine with financial papers devoting pages to the investigation findings that the corruption—“epic” said the FT—appeared to be widespread);
  • The findings from an inquiry into the BBC scandal involving Jimmy Savile showed that decisions not to run an expose appeared to be more mismanagement than cover up;
  • South Korea elected conservative Park Geun-hye as president;
  • Instagram photoshopped its statements on “sharing” users photos but unclear whether the about face would convince Kim Kardashian not to take her snaps elsewhere; and
  • NYSE Euronext was sold to upstart ICE for $8.2 billion, showing how technology is the name of the global trading game. End of Story
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The Week Unpeeled

The US jobs report was mostly positive with non-farm payroll adding a stronger-than-expected 163,000 jobs while the unemployment rate edged up to 8.3 percent in July from 8.2 percent in June. The news sent US stocks soaring, with the Dow ending up 0.16 percent for the week to 13,096, a three-month high.  As many analysts commented from the rally positive economic data trumps Euro news, at least for least week.

Elsewhere:

  • Knight Capital continued to dig itself out from severe trading glitches last week that cost the brokerage firm $440 million and perhaps its financial independence as it searched for capital;
  • Hotmail is out as Microsoft is replacing the once-popular email service with guess what? Outlook.
  • Jonah Lehrer, a staff writer at notoriously fact-finding accurate The New Yorker, admitted to making up Bob Dylan quotes in his bestselling book on creativity. Beyond ironic.
  • Gore Vidal, the American “man of letters,” died (and oddly, The New York Times did not reference its one-page obit on its front page;
  • The NASA rover Curiosity was scheduled to land on Mars by Monday;
  • Olympic fever took over as the London 2012 games got underway. Top headlines:
    • As public anger grew at the number of empty seats at events The London Olympic Organizing Committee had to draft in solders, teachers and students to fill spaces, tickets still remain largely unavailable to book through the official site;
    • China became embroiled in the first doping controversy of the Olympics after American John Leonard, executive director of the World Swimming Coaches Association, said swimmer Ye Shiwen's gold medal performance in the 400m individual medley was “unbelievable” and “disturbing”;
    • American swimmer Michael Phelps officially became the most decorated Olympian in history after winning his 22h  Olympic medal at the 2012 London Games and went to win at least one more by press time;
    • Eight players from China, Indonesia and South Korea were disqualified from the women's doubles badminton tournament having been accused of trying to lose their group matches to face easier opposition in the next round; and
    • The streets of London were left deserted with as many as 1.5 million people working from home and people staying away from London resulting in a fall in sales for many of the Capital’s retailers. End of Story
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I was moved by a recent article in The Economist titled "The One Shot Society." The story was about South Korea's society, its educational system and the way in which one’s future is determined. South Koreans study 24/7 throughout their childhood preparing to take a single exam that will determine their fate (the university they attend, job they’ll be able to secure, etc.). The kicker is that this test is taken when the individual is just a teenager. In this culture, you have one shot, not many, to define your future and succeed.

Reading this story really made me stop in my steps and think about my own life and career. As someone who had slightly above average SAT and GMAT scores, I would have never have had the chance to succeed, had I been born into this society (I was admitted to Columbia Business School based on my story, not my scores).

Merit, accomplishment and entrepreneurial grit are discounted in Korea. High scores and their version of the "Ivy League" is the only route to success. While America certainly has its issues, I'm proud to regularly observe how hard work, creativity and entrepreneurial focus can bring great success.

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