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The Wall Street Journal Asia’s Future Leadership Program reaches out to business and finance students at universities across Asia to better prepare today’s student leaders for tomorrow’s real-life challenges.

Under the program, students receive The Wall Street Journal Asia each business day during the academic year. They gain a real-world understanding of global business competition, economic and business concepts, technology, marketing and the workings of the financial markets, and witness present day case studies as they unfold at companies and industries in their home country and around the world.

As part of the program, The Journal also facilitates a number of academic activities during the year to promote experience-based learning. With support from our Corporate Education Partners, these may include lectures and seminars, business games, contests and competitions, or case-study analysis. These activities provide students with an opportunity to learn from real business leaders and demonstrate their ability to recognize business concepts and theory as applied in the real-world.

For more information on the program, or to join us as a participating university or corporate partner, please contact:
Charlotte Lee at
Charlotte.Lee@dowjones.com  
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
The following articles are available to current subscribers only
  China Gobbled Up U.S. Debt in 2014
China gobbled up Treasury debt maturing in more than a year at the fastest clip on record in 2014, underscoring Beijing’s role in keeping yields down.
Thu, 19 Feb 2015 21:31:58 EST
  Japan Display May Build New Plant to Supply Apple
Apple would cover much of the construction costs and get most of the panel output for a plant that would start operating in 2016.
Thu, 19 Feb 2015 23:57:16 EST
  Greece Can Pay Its Debts in Full, but It Won't
Brussels Beat: For Greece’s creditors, the signs aren’t propitious that Greece is willing to pay the political price needed to service its debts in full, writes Stephen Fidler.
Thu, 19 Feb 2015 23:25:00 EST
  Oil's Volatility Reflects Debate: Is Worst Over?
New evidence of surging U.S. oil supplies sent prices on a roller-coaster ride Thursday, reflecting the growing divide among traders over whether an eight-month rout is over.
Thu, 19 Feb 2015 19:54:52 EST
  Nikkei Sets Another 15-Year High
Asian stocks were mostly higher, with many markets closed for the Lunar New Year holiday, but Japan’s benchmark index extended gains to a new 15-year high on prospects for better earnings.
Thu, 19 Feb 2015 22:33:08 EST
  Wall Street Staffing Falls Again
The 10 largest investment banks trimmed head counts by 4% last year, the fourth year in a row of staffing cutbacks as firms face pressure to hold down costs.
Thu, 19 Feb 2015 20:02:13 EST
  Telstra Picks Penn as New CEO
Telstra appointed insider Andy Penn as its new chief executive to continue the work of sizing up Asian expansion opportunities for Australia’s biggest telecoms company.
Thu, 19 Feb 2015 21:06:24 EST
  Probe Clears World Bank Top Brass of Wrongdoing
A law firm investigating accusations the World Bank’s top brass may have mishandled a $1 billion Chinese loan to the bank’s poverty fund has cleared the institution’s management of any wrongdoing, according a summary of the firm’s findings released by the bank.
Thu, 19 Feb 2015 20:35:06 EST
  Wal-Mart Lifts Wages as Market Gets Tighter
Wal-Mart plans to boost pay for its U.S. employees to at least $10 an hour by next year, well above the minimum wage, signaling a tightening labor market and rising competition for lower-paid workers.
Thu, 19 Feb 2015 22:33:25 EST
  Intuit Sees No Sign of System Breach
Intuit’s chief financial officer said Thursday that the online tax-software company hasn’t seen any indications that its systems were breached in connection with a wave of fraudulent tax-return filings this month.
Thu, 19 Feb 2015 17:09:12 EST






 
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