The Financial Planner's Briefcase

Wharton, MIT Return to MBA Blackboard

Stock quotes in this article: C , BAC , GMGMQ  

BOSTON (TheStreet) -- Russell Hansen's job as a vested, union-protected youth adviser at Boston's community centers kept him financially secure, but ultimately unsatisfied.

With his wife offering to support the two of them on her salary, Hansen quit his job and began pursuing an MBA last fall at Boston's Suffolk University. His first step toward a leadership role in nonprofit development coincided with the collapse of Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns, and the ensuing recession.

"My finance professor specifically mentioned Lehman Brothers a couple of times because he lost money in the collapse," Hansen said. "There are still students who are all about maximizing profits and getting money for the shareholders, but all my professors have tried to stay in the middle and say that profits are important, but you have to approach them in an ethical way and look at it in the long term."

Hansen, his fellow MBAs and his professors are a microcosm of how business schools across the U.S. have dealt with failures in the banking (including bailouts of Citigroup(C Quote) and Bank of America(BAC Quote)), automotive (General Motors(GMGMQ Quote) and Chrysler) and real-estate industries (mortgage-rate caps), the ethical failings of Bernard Madoff and Allen Stanford and the government's reaction to all of the above. Administrators and faculty are tearing up old lessons globalization and efficient markets in favor of behavioral economics and teachings from the downturn's principals players. Students, for their part, are questioning staff about the mistakes of the past while increasingly engaging their international classmates and turning to career development offices and old-fashioned legwork to ensure their future.

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