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BusinessWeek:商学院毕业生的寒冬 04/03/2008

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发表于 2008-4-4 12:46:00 | 只看该作者

BusinessWeek:商学院毕业生的寒冬 04/03/2008

It's Looking Grim for New Grads


    
    


        
Recession-time MBAs face tough choices—and more modest earnings over their lifetimes

    


    


By early February, when Casey Quinn interviewed at Morgan Stanley (MS)
for an internship, the handwriting was on the wall. Global stocks had
lost $5 trillion in the first few weeks of the year, and the U.S.
economy appeared to be on the verge of recession. So when Morgan told
Quinn "no thanks," the 25-year-old MBA student at Washington University
in St. Louis went to Plan B. Quinn shelved his dreams of working on
Wall Street and took an internship at Mattel (MAT),
which he hopes will lead to a permanent job after graduation. Says the
aspiring CFO: "There's more than one way to skin a cat."


    

Gone are the days when B-schoolers had the luxury of choosing from
among a half-dozen internships or job offers. As the Class of 2008
prepares to graduate, an uncertain business climate is forcing students
to make difficult career choices that could have long-term economic
consequences. A growing body of research on both MBAs and undergrads
suggests that graduating into an economic downturn will substantially
reduce lifetime earnings—in some cases by millions of dollars.


    

So far the recruiting environment isn't nearly as bad as it was
during the 2001 downturn, when MBA grads accepted offers only to have
them rescinded. Still, at the University of Rochester B-school, salary
offers are trending modestly downward. And big financial-services firms
are taking on fewer newly minted MBAs. At Citigroup (C),
such job offers are down 10% to 15% overall, according to Caitlin
McLaughlin, global head of campus recruiting. "We'll err on the side of
caution," she says.


    

THIRTEEN-YEAR GAP


    

For many new college grads, though, the real problems will come
later than this summer—much later. One 2006 study found that Canadian
college students graduating in a downturn earn about 6% less for the
first decade of their careers. Another, examining the impact of the
1982 recession on U.S. undergraduates, revealed that every
percentage-point increase in the unemployment rate at graduation
translates into a 7%-to-8% initial wage loss. The gap closes over time
but lasts at least 13 years. Lisa Kahn, the Harvard University PhD
candidate who authored the study, found that recessionary grads had
difficulty switching to better jobs after the economy picks up.


    

Billy Tilson knows what it's like to wander in the wilderness. He
took a job with PricewaterhouseCoopers after graduating from the
University of Virginia in 2000 but was laid off after eight months. For
three years he got by on unemployment and $20-an-hour contract jobs
before landing a position with a consulting firm in Richmond, Va.
Looking back, Tilson, 30, says: "I felt like I was doing something
wrong."


    

For MBA students, the stakes are even higher. Paul Oyer, an
associate professor at Stanford, combed the job histories of Stanford
University MBAs who graduated from 1960 to 1995 and found that those
attending B-school during a bull market were more likely to pursue
careers in investment banking. As a result, they earned far more over
the course of their careers—$1.5 million to $5 million more—than they
would have in other professions. "If you graduate in a recession,
you're likely to work in a different [industry]," says Oyer. "That will
take you down a different track for the rest of your life."


    

As fatalistic as that sounds, there is a way for students to escape
the boom-and-bust cycle: Stay in school till the economy picks up. It
will cost you in the short run, but in the long run, Kahn and Oyer say,
graduating in a bull market will more than make up for it.

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