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<text id=94TT1243>
<title>
Sep. 19, 1994: Business:Looking for Work? Try World
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Sep. 19, 1994 So Young to Kill, So Young to Die
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BUSINESS, Page 44
Looking for Work? Try the World.
</hdr>
<body>
<p> In growing numbers, young Americans are finding jobs abroad
</p>
<p>By Paul Gray--Reported by John Colmey/Hong Kong, Sally B. Donnelly/Moscow,
Stacy Perman and Sribala Subramanian/New York
</p>
<p> During the palmy days of the high-rolling 1980s, some Harvard
Business School M.B.A. candidates would march into commencement
ceremonies waving dollar bills, graphically displaying what
they thought their futures held. They have not been doing that
in the entrenched and downsized '90s. Now they brandish miniature
flags of foreign countries.
</p>
<p> A telling and serious point stands behind such graduation high
jinks. In growing numbers, students in U.S. colleges and professional
schools are looking to go abroad. Such wanderlust among the
young is nothing new, of course; travel has traditionally been
a means of letting off steam after years of cramming for exams--a chance to see some sights, live out some romantic fantasies
and pick up a cosmopolitan patina before going home to the serious
business of life. The difference these days is that young people
are leaving the U.S. not for pleasure or the burnishing of their
education but for the serious business of life.
</p>
<p> Business schools, which closely monitor their graduates and
where they find jobs, have been noticing some figures lately
that suggest a quiet brain drain is under way. At Stanford,
14% of the class of '94 elected to seek jobs abroad, compared
with 6% in 1989. Business schools across the country--from
UCLA to the University of Chicago to Harvard--report similar
numbers. These swelling percentages include foreign nationals
returning home. But at New York University's Stern School of
Business, the number of American students taking jobs overseas
has jumped 20% this year compared with a year ago.
</p>
<p> Interest in foreign experience is also surging among undergraduates.
Student applications for the University of Michigan's overseas-study
programs in 20 countries have shot up 70% in the past two years.
At Duke, 9.2% of 1993's graduating seniors said they planned
to work abroad, in contrast to 3.2% the year before. And plenty
of people abroad have evidence that the young Americans are
coming. In Buenos Aires, Martin Porcel, spokesman for the American
Chamber of Commerce in Argentina, says that eight months ago,
his office received about one resume a month from U.S. applicants.
Now that figure is eight to 10, and many are looking for their
first job. Some 19 Americans, many of them young graduates,
arrive in Hong Kong every day to take up jobs, as against half
that number a decade ago. This year the Japanese government's
Japan Exchange and Teaching Program, which offers one-year contracts
to foreigners to work with local municipalities or as assistant
language teachers, attracted 4,100 U.S. applicants, up fourfold
since 1989.
</p>
<p> This nascent outward-bound movement even has its own magazine,
Transitions Abroad, which for several years has been targeted
at American college students who want to work overseas. Founder
and editor Clayton Hubbs, 58, takes it for granted that campus
hunger for foreign-job information is surging. "I would make
a guess that the numbers of those going abroad have increased
between 10% to 25% over the past five years," he says. "But
what is more interesting to note is the areas that have emerged
as the preferred destinations. In the past, Europe was the place
students automatically gravitated to; now people are saying
Europe is the past and the Third World is the future. More people
are going abroad to work because there are no jobs here that
are interesting."
</p>
<p> That may be an overstatement, but it raises a good and potentially
troubling question: Are young people venturing abroad out of
entrepreneurial zeal or because they feel squeezed and stymied
by the U.S. job market? Elder observers provide contradictory
answers. Maury Hanigan runs a consulting firm that advises multinational
companies on staffing strategy and conducts focus groups with
college students across the country. She says the twentysomethings
she listens to express frustration at "the logjam caused by
baby boomers, so many of whom are ahead of them in management
jobs and won't retire for another 20 years."
</p>
<p> Others admit that U.S. job prospects are cramped, but then go
on to make a virtue of necessity. "There are about 12 million
students in colleges across the country, and this economy cannot
absorb all of them," says Michael Kahan, a political science
professor at Brooklyn College of the City University of New
York. He tells his students, all within a subway ride of Wall
Street, to think globally if they can't find work at home. "Their
skills could be put to better use in less developed places like
Mexico and the former Soviet Union," Kahan argues. "If my students
ask me where they should look for jobs, I say, `Learn Spanish
and go to Mexico. Try the unconventional. Don't just look in
the New York Times for a job; look in the Economist.'" And Kahan
thinks worldwide career searches are likely to be commonplace
in the future: "It is going to be a life choice, not a vacation
or a lark like the Peace Corps, where the purpose was always
to come back."
</p>
<p> That may be easy for a tenured professor in New York City to
say. But what of the young people who have actually expatriated
and found jobs? How are they faring, and do they feel they jumped
or were pushed?
</p>
<p> They come in several categories, these American itinerants.
Some have hired on with banks and consulting firms or the dwindling
number of U.S. companies willing to post, and pay the expenses
of, novices overseas. Some have gone to work directly for foreign
businesses. Others originally went abroad for such conventional
purposes as study, language teaching or subsidized social work
and then found that their knowledge of English and of U.S. mores
was a negotiable skill in the view of local employers. And a
few set out, gimlet-eyed, to seize or create business opportunities
in new markets.
</p>
<p> They are principally congregating in three distinct areas: the
Pacific Rim, including not only such thriving hubs as Tokyo
and Hong Kong but China, Vietnam and Cambodia as well; Latin
America, especially Mexico, which, thanks to the passage of
the North American Free Trade Agreement last year, has become
a potentially major market for U.S. goods and expertise; and
Eastern Europe and countries of the former Soviet Union, where
capitalism is breaking out all over, often in unpredictable
ways. "Only an entrepreneurial student is willing to walk into
so unstructured an environment," says consultant Hanigan. "You
have the cowboys going to Eastern Europe."
</p>
<p> "It's the wild, wild East over here," says Mike Gerrity, 24,
who has established his own consulting firm in Moscow to help
multinationals set up offices in Russia. A 1992 graduate of
the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School, Gerrity had
no plans to wind up in Moscow until he visited some classmates
working there and decided to stay, since the job market back
home looked discouraging. He has no regrets: "There are opportunities
to be creative here in a way there aren't in the States, where
there is an infrastructure and there are rules. It's also nice
to have access to upper-level management, who wouldn't give
you the time of day back home."
</p>
<p> This note--responsible duties early in a career--is sounded
again and again by young American expatriates. Nicolas Kazloff,
24, a journalism graduate of the University of California, Berkeley,
originally traveled to South America "to look for meaning in
life." What he eventually found was a job designing and editing
a forthcoming English-language edition of the Colombian environmental
magazine Ozono. "Now I have my own magazine," he says. "That
would just be a dream if I had stayed in the U.S." Another sort
of vision has come true for Leslie Short, 29, of New York City.
</p>
<p> A dancer and choreographer, she moved to Japan two years ago,
and now runs her own show: J Men's Tokyo, a Chippendale's-like
establishment where American and British men strip to their
G-strings in front of interested female audiences. "I don't
think anyone in the States would have given me responsibility
for everything," she says. "And I'm making more money here than
I could at home."
</p>
<p> There can be downsides to the expatriate life. Marianne Sullivan,
28, who received a master's in journalism and Eastern European
politics from Columbia University last year, is co-director
of a media training center in Tirana, Albania. "No one comes
here for fun," she says.
</p>
<p> "I live in a house with two other people where the water runs
only three times a day." Yale graduate Kathleen Charlton, 29,
has for the past year been managing director of Ashta International
Inc., a privately owned consulting firm in Hanoi; she says she
enjoys her life there except for the lack of "the usual stuff:
I miss good movies, I miss good Mexican food, I miss bagels."
</p>
<p> Whatever the deprivations, many of the expatriates seem inclined
to stay put for a while, perhaps a lot longer. Mike Galetto,
23, a 1993 DePauw graduate and a free-lance journalist in Buenos
Aires, professes to be "in no hurry" to return to the U.S.:
"It seems that back home people my age either have no job or
are in jobs they hate. So why not give it a shot here?" Larissa
Donovan, 25, graduated from Northwestern in 1991 and moved to
China in search of a career. She is now a trade representative
in Beijing and considers herself an "expat forever." She explains,
saying, "Here the changes are so great. Home looks the same
every time I go there." Jameson Firestone, 27, has established
his own law firm in Moscow and can't imagine going back to a
less hectic legal career in the U.S.: "Here the work is like
being a doctor in an emergency room--everything is critical."
When he does ponder life after Moscow, Firestone looks for the
exotic rather than the homegrown: "Jakarta, maybe. I hear that's
a pretty interesting place."
</p>
<p> More and more Americans are discovering that faraway places
can yield up challenging occupations. Gregory Piccininno, 29,
a New Jersey native and a graduate of the London Business School,
found himself drawn to what he calls the "savage capitalism"
of Brazil. He works for a Brazilian financial firm in Rio de
Janeiro, socializes mostly with local friends, with whom he
speaks Portuguese, and has no plans to leave anytime soon. "As
a non-Brazilian, I get a lot of respect, if for nothing else
than my abilities in English," he says.
</p>
<p> Shouldn't the temporary or perhaps permanent loss of such ambitious
and energetic talents be a cause of concern? Is the U.S. in
danger of becoming in a possible future some weird, post-cold
war colony, exporting its raw and not-so-raw material--its
educated young people--and not even getting paid in return?
</p>
<p> Business leaders and academics who have been charting this development
think not. "It is not a brain drain but an enhancement of the
brain power of the U.S.," says William Glavin, a former vice
chairman of Xerox and now the president of Babson College in
Wellesley, outside Boston. Glavin believes the new expatriates
are receiving--and will return with--invaluable training
they cannot now get at home: "A major problem in corporate America
is a lack of global management knowledge. They are not going
to learn much from managers in the U.S." William Hasler, dean
of the Haas School of Business at the University of California,
Berkeley, makes a related point. He finds the current outflux
of young business people "very positive, because most of these
people will end up working for American companies and will be
able to make those companies more successful and globalized."
Even those who don't return, Hasler argues, will benefit American
businesses by providing advice to their foreign employers on
how to deal most productively and profitably in the U.S.
</p>
<p> Such optimism is comforting and, in a global perspective, almost
certainly correct. National boundaries become ever less important
in the world's economies; a job is a job, whether it be in Budapest,
Buenos Aires or Birmingham, Alabama. Still, certain ancient
human emotions have not yet adapted to the new realities. Some
of the new expatriates tell of encountering resistance from
their parents. When Rob Swift, 23, graduated from Stanford last
year with a degree in international relations and announced
that he had found a job in India, his mother offered to pay
him to stay behind. And it's a safe bet that some of those spectators
watching their offspring collect Harvard M.B.A.s wish the kids
were still waving dollar bills and anticipating careers closer
to home.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>