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Wall Street Oasis » Forums » I-Banking Bullpen

Liberal-Arts Failure Is Wall Street’s Gain Forum's RSS Feed Share

freeloader's picture
freeloader
     PE
 
(Gorilla, 670
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 2:17pm
ty.jpg

Explanation for why Ivies feed Wall Street - because the smart kids there are too incompetent and lack the skills to do anything else but continue to apply for for jobs that will teach actual skills.

What do you think WSO? Fact or fiction?

"In effect, Wall Street -- like a few other professions, including law, management consulting and Teach for America -- is taking advantage of the weakness of liberal arts education.

For many kids, college represents an end goal. Once you get into a good college, you’ve made it, and everyone stops worrying about you. You’re encouraged to take classes in subjects like English literature and history and political science, all of which are fine and interesting, but none of which leave you with marketable skills. After a few years of study, you suddenly find it’s late in your junior year, or early in your senior year, and you have no skills pointing to the obvious next step.

What Wall Street figured out is that colleges are producing a large number of very smart, completely confused graduates. Kids who have ample mental horsepower, incredible work ethics and no idea what to do next. So the finance industry takes advantage of that confusion, attracting students who never intended to work in finance but don’t have any better ideas about where to go."

Full article: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-02-16/harvard-liberal-arts-failure-is...

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  • I-Banking Bullpen
wadtk's picture

"Explanation for why Ivies

wadtk
     AM
 
(Senior Baboon, 203
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 2:29pm

"Explanation for why Ivies feed Wall Street - because the smart kids there are too incompetent and lack the skills to do anything else but continue to apply for for jobs that will teach actual skills. "

I do not understand that sentence.

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blastoise's picture

spot on

blastoise
     O
 
(Neanderthal, 3,694
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 2:40pm

spot on

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Edmundo Braverman's picture

LOLOLOLOLOLOL I can see it.

Edmundo Braverman
     ST
 
 
(Human, 11,011
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 2:51pm

LOLOLOLOLOLOL

I can see it.

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lambertoscar's picture

I'd take someone who thinks

lambertoscar
    
 
(Monkey, 30
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 2:52pm

I'd take someone who thinks out of the box and is interested in random subjects at harvard anyday over a business major at a random univ. I personally despise business majors, they are major tools, who have seen too many wall street movies and read too many of those books. They are usually goofballs and try to dress up slick in school, to be one of "them". Anyway I've seen many of these goofs unsuccessful at what they tried to do, I don't feel pleasure in seeing it.

Your passion shouldn't be to make money, money should be a consequence of your passion, whatever that is.

The masked avenger par sexellence

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wolverine19x89's picture

lambertoscar wrote: Your

wolverine19x89
     O
 
(King Kong, 1,582
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 2:57pm
lambertoscar:

Your passion shouldn't be to make money, money should be a consequence of your passion, whatever that is.

Hey man, people can't choose their passion, I'm sure there are some people out there who's passion really is making money.

If your dreams don't scare you, then they are not big enough.

"There are two types of people in this world: People who say they pee in the shower, and dirty fucking liars."-Louis C.K.

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dabanobo's picture

Drivel. News flash -- liberal

dabanobo
     HF
 
(Senior Orangutan, 496
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 3:15pm

Drivel.

News flash -- liberal arts educations aren't practical, and when it comes time to make money instead of getting As, some people prefer to make more rather than less.

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UFOinsider's picture

Liberal arts education was

UFOinsider
     O
 
(Almost Human, 8,133
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 3:11pm

Liberal arts education was traditionally reserved for the ruling class, just like studying foreign policy. It's probably better in the big picture to have informed citizens but I have a liberal arts degree and learned 100% of what I do either on my own or on the job. Colleges really could offer condensed liberal arts requirements and cut down on liberal studies in favor of degrees that are actually usefull. Or just make everyone double major: one practical major, and one 'interest' major. But that would make sense and academics don't want to hear it from anyone, so I suppose in a generation or two they'll figure this out for themselves if their college hasn't gone bankrupt.

As for Wall Street taking advantage of these students, or people's desire to make money..........yeah, and? What's the point of the article? 20 year olds getting a job that pays $100K, what's the problem?

http://www.motifake.com/image/demotivational-poster/small/0904/chill-out...

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prospie's picture

If I run a McDonalds and need

prospie
    
 
(King Kong, 1,195
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 3:36pm

If I run a McDonalds and need people to work 100hr weeks flipping burgers and an honors grad from Princeton wants to work for me but does not have a degree in hamburgerology (http://money.howstuffworks.com/mcdonalds4.htm), am I going to turn him down? I have plenty of resources to teach him everything quickly, plus he has demonstrated in our interview that he knows my business and has practiced flipping burgers outside of class.

...because the smart kids there are too incompetent and lack the skills to do anything else but continue to apply for for jobs that will teach actual skills.

Actually, what you're thinking of is milk-and-cookies liberal arts majors who don't take time outside of class to prepare for the real world and therefore couldn't get an actual job - such as something in banking, etc. - and end up in law school or in a masters program. Not on wall street.

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wolverine19x89's picture

prospie wrote: If I run a

wolverine19x89
     O
 
(King Kong, 1,582
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 3:38pm
prospie:

If I run a McDonalds and need people to work 100hr weeks flipping burgers and an honors grad from Princeton wants to work for me but does not have a degree in hamburgerology (http://money.howstuffworks.com/mcdonalds4.htm), am I going to turn him down? I have plenty of resources to teach him everything quickly, plus he has demonstrated in our interview that he knows my business and has practiced flipping burgers outside of class.

That's a weird f'n example

If your dreams don't scare you, then they are not big enough.

"There are two types of people in this world: People who say they pee in the shower, and dirty fucking liars."-Louis C.K.

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bonks's picture

Story of my life.

bonks
     CO
 
(Baboon, 168
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 3:38pm

Story of my life.

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rufiolove's picture

lambertoscar wrote: I'd take

rufiolove
     IB
 
 
(King Kong, 1,766
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 4:48pm
lambertoscar:

I'd take someone who thinks out of the box and is interested in random subjects at harvard anyday over a business major at a random univ. I personally despise business majors, they are major tools, who have seen too many wall street movies and read too many of those books. They are usually goofballs and try to dress up slick in school, to be one of "them". Anyway I've seen many of these goofs unsuccessful at what they tried to do, I don't feel pleasure in seeing it.

Your passion shouldn't be to make money, money should be a consequence of your passion, whatever that is.

aaaaaaand that is why you don't recruit

"In summary, people are morons and who cares. Make a shit ton of money. I've never seen a Ferrari paid for by what people think." - ANT

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Connor's picture

wadtk wrote: "Explanation for

Connor
     IB
 
(King Kong, 1,512
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 4:49pm
wadtk:

"Explanation for why Ivies feed Wall Street - because the smart kids there are too incompetent and lack the skills to do anything else but continue to apply for for jobs that will teach actual skills. "

I do not understand that sentence.

I read that sentence like 3 times too.... No clue what the fuck it's saying.

per ardua ad astra

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triplectz's picture

How about the whole $45,000 a

triplectz
    
 
(Senior Monkey, 76
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 5:09pm

How about the whole $45,000 a year in tuition thing...

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freeloader's picture

Hah - sorry fellas, was a bit

freeloader
     PE
 
(Gorilla, 670
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 5:32pm

Hah - sorry fellas, was a bit rushed in creating the post and didn't really take the time to gather my thoughts properly. What I meant to say was this:

Explanation for why Ivy League grads feed into Wall Street: Ivy League grads have no tangible skills and are too incompetent for any technical field + Wall Street exploits that weakness by offering a familiar recruiting pitch (we're selective!, you need to demonstrate "leadership"!) and offers to them teach real-world skills.

Being a bit of a cynic, the articles argument makes much more sense than "I want to be around other high achievers".

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Thurnis Haley's picture

That's a crazy

Thurnis Haley
     O
 
(Senior Baboon, 241
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 5:38pm

That's a crazy generalization.

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Edmundo Braverman's picture

Thurnis Haley wrote: That's a

Edmundo Braverman
     ST
 
 
(Human, 11,011
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 6:42pm
Thurnis Haley:

That's a crazy generalization.

No it isn't.

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RagnarDanneskjold's picture

I know plenty of guys at

RagnarDanneskjold
     HF
 
(Senior Gorilla, 988
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 7:31pm

I know plenty of guys at target's who literally fell ass backwards into banking. One dude I know, showed up to a JPM info session to "see what investment banking was about" - he literally knew NOTHING at the time. He's now a VP1. A lot of you guys need to get off your high horse. Granted this was in 2006-07.

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blackrainn's picture

This is becoming less and

blackrainn
     IB
 
(Orangutan, 274
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 7:36pm

This is becoming less and less of an issue, and I think liberal arts majors will continue to get squeezed, even from top schools.

CS + Applied Math is where it's at.

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Studiofan's picture

blackrainn wrote: This is

Studiofan
     IB
 
(Senior Baboon, 223
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 7:49pm
blackrainn:

This is becoming less and less of an issue, and I think liberal arts majors will continue to get squeezed, even from top schools.

CS + Applied Math is where it's at.

That is true for quant fields, but it is completely unnecessary for basic i-banking, M&A, ect.

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ERGOHOC's picture

So true.

ERGOHOC
     AM
 
(Orangutan, 265
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 8:01pm

So true.

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prospie's picture

scottj19x89 wrote: prospie

prospie
    
 
(King Kong, 1,195
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 8:04pm
scottj19x89:
prospie:

If I run a McDonalds and need people to work 100hr weeks flipping burgers and an honors grad from Princeton wants to work for me but does not have a degree in hamburgerology (http://money.howstuffworks.com/mcdonalds4.htm), am I going to turn him down? I have plenty of resources to teach him everything quickly, plus he has demonstrated in our interview that he knows my business and has practiced flipping burgers outside of class.

That's a weird f'n example

It's not weird at all. By the same token, an honors grad from Princeton - w/o any sort of finance or accounting degree - is totally qualified if not overqualified for a job entering data into models and processing deals. I hope this is not news to you, but a high schooler could do it. A monkey could do it.

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wolverine19x89's picture

I know, but one would think

wolverine19x89
     O
 
(King Kong, 1,582
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 8:23pm

I know, but one would think that an honors grad from Princeton would be working at McDonalds for a day or two before he says "fuck this shit" and goes and gets some job almost anywhere else... seems like a waste of training and paperwork to me. I'd rather be sitting in some office doing crap work than in fast food again. That may be because the place I worked at had a hole in the hose that you sucked the grease out of the broilers though, so I was always freaked out that I was gonna get shot in the eye with hot grease. That and getting burned was a daily thing.

If your dreams don't scare you, then they are not big enough.

"There are two types of people in this world: People who say they pee in the shower, and dirty fucking liars."-Louis C.K.

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elephonky's picture

What UFO said. Also why are

elephonky
    
 
(Baboon, 155
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 8:36pm

What UFO said. Also why are we assuming that a liberal arts education is comprised of art history and poli sci? Since when can you not study any math or comp sci at Harvard? Generalizing that liberal arts colleges breed useless, albeit smart, grads is somewhat of an insult to their intellect and hard work.

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Stringer Bell's picture

On the one hand, I too, am

Stringer Bell
     IB
 
 
(King Kong, 1,509
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 8:50pm

On the one hand, I too, am perplexed when I see a kid from a top school w/ a double major in Chemical Engineering and Computer Science, 4.0 in each, incredible research projects and start-up companies they've got off the ground want to get into banking. Seriously, kids like that need to be fixing shit in this country, not putting together PIB's and spreading market comps.

The only companies that really reward kids like that > Wall Street seem to big oil companies (Shell's paying u.g. Chem Engineers +$80 base and send them home at 5 everyday). The rest of the industry needs to step up and start paying smart kids w/ technical degree's top dollar if they want to keep them off of WS.

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rynofrowan's picture

prospie wrote: If I run a

rynofrowan
     ST
 
(Baboon, 174
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 9:28pm
prospie:

If I run a McDonalds and need people to work 100hr weeks flipping burgers and an honors grad from Princeton wants to work for me but does not have a degree in hamburgerology (http://money.howstuffworks.com/mcdonalds4.htm), am I going to turn him down?

i'd use his chemistry to help perfect my crystal. don't run a maccas though just 14 'los pollos hermanos'

Moving tonnes of product. Making fat stacks.

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kmess024's picture

Who is "Wall Street"? This

kmess024
    
 
(Senior Baboon, 238
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 9:46pm

Who is "Wall Street"?
This seems spot on.

............

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Devils Advocate's picture

Lol this article might as

Devils Advocate
     IB
 
(Senior Gorilla, 875
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 10:26pm

Lol this article might as well be about me

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FlakieBear's picture

One of my friend's

FlakieBear
    
 
(Senior Orangutan, 389
 
Points)
  on 2/16/12 at 10:33pm

One of my friend's requirement for undergraduate business major with an accounting concentration:
He did not go to a liberal art program. Studied outside of the US.

Minimum Requirement: 90 accounting credits = 30 courses of accounting
Duration: 5 years: 1 st year: General business courses;
2nd,3rd,4th year: accounting and finance courses + inernship
5th year: study abroad, capstone courses ( taught by foreign professors) memoir and full time job training

During this 5 years, her accounting concentration requires:

Freshman Year:

Personnel Management
Principles of Accounting I
Principles of Accounting II
Business Law
Macro-Economy
Micro-Economics
Applied Maths (for Management)
Applied Statistics (for Management)
Introduction to Computer Science / Programming
Financial Mathematics

Total 30 credits.

Sophomore year:
Fiscalité I
Comptabilité Intermédiaire I
Comptabilité Intermédiaire II
Audit I
Accounting Information System
Cost Price Analysis I
Cost Price Analysis II
Introduction au Marketing
Corporate Finance
Gestion de Projets

Total 30 credits

Junior Year

Accounting theory
audit II
Chart of Accounts for the Country Specific
taxation II
Specialized Accounting I
Specialized Accounting I
audit III
International Business Law
Financial Analysis
General policy of the company

Total 30 credits.
Grand Total :90 Accounting credits

5th year :Thesis (6 credits)
Study abroad or full time job training
Capstone courses with foreign visiting professors/ executives/entrepreneurs

Power and Money do not change men; they only unmask them

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esbanker's picture

freeloader wrote: Explanation

esbanker
     VC
 
(Orangutan, 305
 
Points)
  on 2/17/12 at 12:24am
freeloader:

Explanation for why Ivies feed Wall Street - because the smart kids there are too incompetent and lack the skills to do anything else but continue to apply for for jobs that will teach actual skills.

In the GMAT this would be an explain the paradox critical reasoning question.

Go!

"It behooves every man to remember that the work of a critic is of altogether secondary importance, and that, in the end, progress is accomplished by the man who does things." - Uncle Teddy.

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understatement's picture

"Audit III" during junior

understatement
    
 
(Senior Chimp, 24
 
Points)
  on 2/17/12 at 12:31am

"Audit III" during junior year? Truly, there is another, far more undesirable end of the spectrum.

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rynofrowan's picture

liberal arts is for sissies

rynofrowan
     ST
 
(Baboon, 174
 
Points)
  on 2/17/12 at 12:34am

liberal arts is for sissies and faggots

Moving tonnes of product. Making fat stacks.

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FlakieBear's picture

understatement wrote: "Audit

FlakieBear
    
 
(Senior Orangutan, 389
 
Points)
  on 2/17/12 at 12:59am
understatement:

"Audit III" during junior year? Truly, there is another, far more undesirable end of the spectrum.

It's better than philosophy, Pr. of Marketing and most of the gened courses or the chore courses for typical business major

Power and Money do not change men; they only unmask them

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SlikRick's picture

Can someone explain what the

SlikRick
     IB
 
(Senior Baboon, 229
 
Points)
  on 2/17/12 at 7:38am

Can someone explain what the author is saying when he states "The fact that Teach for America -- which pays almost nothing and can place its hires far from cosmopolitan hot spots -- is one of the few recruiting systems competitive with Wall Street." TFA pays something like 45-50K in SF/LA. Additionally, its one of the best MBA Resume Booster experiences a candidate can have. Is the author just saying that 50K is light compared to a 100K BB IBD gig?

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trade4trade's picture

SlikRick wrote: Can someone

trade4trade
     O
 
(Monkey, 44
 
Points)
  on 2/18/12 at 7:17pm
SlikRick:

Can someone explain what the author is saying when he states "The fact that Teach for America -- which pays almost nothing and can place its hires far from cosmopolitan hot spots -- is one of the few recruiting systems competitive with Wall Street." TFA pays something like 45-50K in SF/LA. Additionally, its one of the best MBA Resume Booster experiences a candidate can have. Is the author just saying that 50K is light compared to a 100K BB IBD gig?

The Author is saying that TFA is able to recruit competitively, showing that liberal arts grads are open to other paths, even if they pay less money, as long as there's some perceived value.

"The fact that Teach for America -- which pays almost nothing and can place its hires far from cosmopolitan hot spots -- is one of the few recruiting systems competitive with Wall Street suggests that graduates are open to paths that aren’t remotely as remunerative as finance and aren’t based in New York or San Francisco. They’re just not seeing all that many of them."

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A week or two ago there was an article written about how your weight might inversely effect you during the hiring process. During the conversation I dropped some personal information about me losing 130 (now 135 pounds). I was PM’d by somebody asking me to tell my story. Well I have some free...
How finance saved and gave me a life
<em>Mod (Andy) note: </em><a href="http://www.wallstreetoasis.com/blog/phantombankers-gmat-study-guide">Here is the link to his study guide</a> Background: I recently took the GMAT and scored a 770 on my first and only try. Long story short, I studied and took...
How I got a 770 on the GMAT with minimal effort while working banking hours…
Here's my story: I will be graduating this semester from a non-target university, majoring finance and accounting, with a decent gpa (3.5 up). I started networking last summer, searching for that IBD full time offer. I was even considering delaying my graduation for one semester with the...
Full Time Offer, at last! Thanks WSO!
There she is again: Diane Sawyer, the primary ABC evening news anchor, with another installment in their interminable series of reports on imports and employment in America. I could just strangle her. One week their (alleged) reporters go to people’s houses and look at everything the occupants...
Sawyer’s Syndrome: The ABCs of Trade and Employment
Fellow Primates, We are looking for 1-2 students on each campus to help WSO in its sales efforts to student clubs/career centers, and overall promotion at your school both online and on the ground. Below is a description of the position and benefits...thanks in advance for your help! <a...
WSO Campus Representative Program
There was much wailing and gnashing of teeth at the close on Friday over the perceived lack of performance in the Facebook IPO. The stock priced at $38, opened at $42.50 (after a few hiccups at the NASDORK), and closed at exactly $38 after an effort by the syndicate members akin to the Spartans at...
IPO Pricing 101
A common thread we see on WSO from time to time is regarding working for banks in their regional offices. As banks are leaning towards more cost cutting and squeezing every dollar they can from their operations,<strong> a popular tactic has been to expand existing business and move...
Consider your BB regional office.
<strong>End of day update: </strong> <ul> <li>Close: 38.23 +0.23‎ (0.61%‎) and holding stable in after hours trading.</li> <li>Open: 42.05</li> <li>High: 45.00</li> <li>Low: 38.00 </li> <li>Volume:...
Volume of FB Shares Traded today?
I'm going to be an organ donor in the next few months (kidney, to my dad). I'm not at all in it for the glory (except for subtly dropping it when i'm picking up a chick at the bar) BUT should I add this experience to my resume? If so, how and where? If its subtle / small / at...
Add "Organ Donor" to my resume?
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