To coincide with International Education Week, the US State Department’s reminder of the value of work and study abroad, I wrote this piece for Today. It looks at a recent EU study of the Erasmus program, the student mobility scheme that has helped hundreds of thousands of young Europeans study and work elsewhere in the European Union, and applies the lessons to Asia. In Singapore, where policy makers worry that the mismatch of labor market needs with the skills of graduates may raise unemployment as it has elsewhere in the world, the ASPIRE commission has urged that more work experience be integrated into study at the tertiary level. Using the Erasmus impact study results, I suggest that the benefits of international study or work experience for students in terms of employability should not be overlooked. Continue reading
Tag Archives: Germany
Academic entrepreneurship: West meets East
Last night I attended a reception at the beautiful residence of the German Ambassador to Singapore to mark the ties between Germany and Singapore in the life sciences. It gave the recent THE world rankings of universities some real world context, in the sense of showing the rise of Asia in some of the new growth sectors and the link to higher education. One of the speakers was Dr. Andreas Schmidt, the CEO of Ayoxxa, a biotech firm based in Cologne and Singapore that just raised a round of investments to develop and bring to market its chip-based protein analysis technology. That technology was developed by Dieter Trau, a German bioengineering professor at the National University of Singapore. NUS, which didn’t break the top 50 best schools for the life sciences as recently as two years ago, is now ranked 33rd in the world.
Other speakers talked about ‘Singapore as the new US’ and ‘the East as the new West’, highlighting, if in a slightly hyperbolic way, the ease of doing business in Asia and the growing talent pool in the region. Singapore and Germany were touted as bridges on their respective continents, given their central location, and thus natural partners to bring these two zones together.
Is there a new era dawning where Asia represents a new frontier for European entrepreneurship? It’s hard to say. The Economist’s recent coverage of the difficulty of starting businesses in Europe laments the continent’s lack of entrepreneurs, thus migration elsewhere where the conditions are better makes sense, though Berlin, London and Stockholm are seen as hubs of innovation. Asian investment in creating leading universities is also an important factor: young scientists are being attracted because the quality of the labs surpasses what they are offered in Europe and North America.
On the other hand, start-ups need capital and there is still a tendency for capital to invest locally. The global slowdown isn’t helping matters with financing being tighter and in the case of Singapore, there is some grumbling that money that could be going in to investing in innovations is instead being plowed into an overheated property market where returns have been high with relatively little perceived risk. Still, as Asia continues its ascent to become a knowledge based economic center and source of innovation, it is good to see European entrepreneurs present.
