问答题
Bill Gates, the billionaire Microsoft chairman without a
single earned university degree, is by his success raising new doubts about the
worth of the business world's favorite academic title: the MBA (Master of
Business Administration) .
46){{U}}The MBA, a 20th-century
product, always has borne the mark of lowly commerce and greed on the tree-lined
campuses ruled by purer disciplines such as philosophy and
literature.{{/U}}
But even with the recession apparently cutting
into the hiring of business school graduates, about 79, 000 people are expected
to receive MBAs in 1993.47){{U}} This is nearly 16 times the number of business
graduates in 1960, a testimony to the widespread assumption that the MBA is
vital for young men and women who want to run companies some day.{{/U}}
"If you are going into the corporate world it is still a disadvantage not
to have one," said Donald Morrison, professor of marketing and management
science. "But in the last five years or so, when someone says, 'Should I attempt
to get an MBA?' The answer a lot more is: It depends."
48)
{{U}}The success of Bill Gates and other non-MBAs, such as the late Sam Walton of
Wal-Mart Stores Inc, has helped inspire self-conscious debates on business
school campuses over the worth of a business degree and whether management
skills can be taught.{{/U}}
The Harvard Business Review printed a
lively, fictional exchange of letters to dramatize complaints about business
degree holders.
49){{U}} The article called MBA hires "extremely
disappointing" and said "MBAs want to move up too fast, they don't understand
politics and people, and they aren't able to function as part of a team until
their third year. But by then, there out looking for other jobs" .{{/U}}
The problem, most participants in the debate acknowledge, is that the MBA
has acquired an aura of future fiches and power far beyond its actual importance
and usefulness.
Enrollment in business schools exploded in the
1970s and 1980s and created the assumption that no one who pursued a business
career could do without one. The growth was fueled by. a backlash against the
anti-business values of the 1960s and by the women's movement.
50){{U}} Business people who have hired or worked with MBAs sax those with
the degrees often know how to analyze systems but are not so skillful at
motivating people. {{/U}}"They don't get a lot of grounding in the people side of
the business," said James Shaffer, vice-president and principal of the Towers
Perrin Management Consulting Finn.