The program, whose endowment represents one of the largest single gifts to education in the world and one of the largest philanthropic gifts ever in China, was announced by Mr. Schwarzman in Beijing on Sunday.
The Schwarzman Scholars program will pay all expenses for 200 students each year from around the world for a one-year master’s program at Tsinghua University in Beijing.
The program’s creation underlines the tremendous importance of China and its market to Wall Street financiers and corporate leaders, who have become increasingly anxious as security and economic frictions grow between China and the West.
Mr. Schwarzman said his goal was to reduce such tensions by educating the world’s future leaders, but his role in the project will also raise his political profile in China, potentially giving him and his private equity firm, the Blackstone Group, increased access to Chinese leaders. Many of them, including Xi Jinping, who became president of China last month, attended Tsinghua, one of the country’s top universities.
Mr. Schwarzman said he was donating $100 million from his personal fortune, which Forbes estimated last month at $6.5 billion. He said he had raised $100 million from donors, and expected to raise the remaining $100 million by the end of this year.
Many of the donors have sprawling business interests in China and frequently deal with government regulators and state-owned enterprises that have wide discretion over the activities of foreign companies.
The donors include Boeing, which is aggressively marketing jets in China, the world’s second-largest aircraft market, and Caterpillar, which sells earth-moving equipment in what has become the world’s largest construction market. They also include JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and Credit Suisse, which provide financial services to the Chinese government and state-owned banks.
The biggest donor after Mr. Schwarzman is BP, which produces and imports natural gas in China and also has joint venture chemical plants and other operations in the country.
The personal foundation of MayorMichael R. Bloombergof New York is also a donor. Mr. Bloomberg’s media company is trying to lease more news and data terminals to state-owned banks, but it has been stymied by the government since the company’s publication last year of an investigation into the financial dealings of Mr. Xi’s family.
The scholarship’s advisory board is a who’s who of investors, diplomats and other influential figures, some of whom also have political or financial ties to China. It includes three former secretaries of state, Condoleezza Rice, Colin L. Powelland Henry A. Kissinger; two former treasury secretaries, Robert E. Rubinand Henry M. Paulson Jr.; a number of university presidents and cultural figures, including the cellist Yo-Yo Ma; former President Nicolas Sarkozyof France; and the former prime ministers of three countries, Tony Blair of Britain, Kevin Rudd of Australia and Brian Mulroney of Canada.
Many large Western companies have been pressing for closer ties with China even as security experts warn about China’s military expansion and territorial claims, and many smaller businesses and labor groups warn that China seeks to dominate a wide range of industries.
Mr. Schwarzman said his concern was that as long as the Chinese economy grows two to three times as quickly as the American economy, and with European economies barely growing at all, tensions are likely only to rise.
“The idea was to deal with this problem in a generational manner,” he said in a video interview from New York, adding later in an e-mail, “I feel grateful to be able to have the resources to help change future leaders to impact their countries’ and China’s destinies.”
The program plans to take in 10,000 students over the next 50 years, forming an international network that can bridge differences between China and the West, he said. Forty-five percent will come from the United States, 20 percent from China, and 35 percent from Australia, Canada, Europe, Latin America and the rest of Asia. Africa may be added later.
The scholarship program will not be Mr. Schwarzman’s first major foray into China, where private equity firms like his have been trying to gain entry. In 2007, as he was preparing to take Blackstone public, he sold a $3 billion stake in the company to the China Investment Corporation, the country’s giant sovereign wealth fund. The deal stirred controversy in China when the value of the stake plunged, along with most stocks, during the global financial crisis, drawing vehement criticism among some Chinese. Chinese leaders brushed off the concerns, and the stock has since nearly recovered when dividends are included.
Mr. Schwarzman said his scholarship program had nothing to do with Blackstone or the China Investment Corporation. “This is a private thing by me, it’s not a Blackstone initiative,” he said.
Mr. Schwarzman, 66, got his start at Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, an investment bank later purchased by Credit Suisse. Except for a brief stint in the Army Reserve, he has spent most of his career at two Wall Street giants: Lehman Brothers, whose sale he led in 1984, and then Blackstone, where he is chairman and chief executive. On taking Blackstone public in 2007, he received $4.77 billion when his stake was converted to stock.
His name is also attached to the main branch of the New York Public Library on Fifth Avenue, which was renamed for him after he pledged $100 million in 2008, which he has since donated.
When it begins in 2016, the Schwarzman scholarship program will match the 111-year-old Rhodes in the number of students and the size of its endowment.
The Rhodes endowment is worth about $203 million, according to its trustees. It awards grants to 83 scholars a year, who typically study at Oxford for at least two years though some stay on to complete a doctorate, said Dr. John Hood, a former vice chancellor of Oxford who is the chairman of the Rhodes trustees. About 200 scholars are on stipend at any one time.
Cecil John Rhodes, a British colonialist who made a fortune in South African diamond mines, established the program in 1902 to bring scholars to his home country, the leading imperial power of the day. Mr. Schwarzman will be sending scholars largely from the industrialized world to study in a less-developed country that is seen as a rising world power.
The program will be housed in a new facility at Tsinghua, Schwarzman College. Ground breaking is scheduled for late this year, with a design by Robert A. M. Stern, dean of the Yale School of Architecture.
Students will live in pods of eight bedrooms with a common living room, a design taken from the executive education program at Harvard Business School. The building will also include 12 residential suites for the dean, director and visiting faculty; a two-story forum resembling the one at the Harvard Kennedy School; an auditorium; and four classrooms.
The program will offer master’s degrees in public policy, international relations, economics, business and, later, engineering. It will start each June with a summer-long immersion program in Chinese culture and issues, and an introduction to Mandarin, followed by a full academic year of courses at Tsinghua.
David Daokui Li, a prominent economist at Tsinghua who is the dean of the new scholars program, said the university already offers a third of its courses in English, and more than half in subjects like business and economics. Coincidentally, the ivy-garlanded Tsinghua University was founded in 1911 with foreign money: the United States chose not to accept part of the indemnities promised by China after the Boxer Rebellion, a nationalist uprising against foreigners that ended in 1901, and instead channeled the money to education.
While Mr. Schwarzman said that his main goal was to promote understanding between China and the rest of the world, he acknowledged another, more personal, motive.
When he was a senior at Yale in 1969, he was turned down for a Rhodes scholarship and advanced to finalist but did not win a two-year fellowship at Cambridge. He ended up going to Harvard Business School and Wall Street instead.
“I didn’t get any of those, and wanted one,” he said.
Now that he has created his own international scholarship program, he said, “Maybe even I might have been selected if I were back at Yale in 1969.”
A version of this article appeared in print on April 21, 2013, on page A8 of the New York edition with the headline: $300 Million Scholarship for Study in China Signals a New Focus.
美富豪捐1億元 在北京清華大學設獎學金
要聞組綜合21日電
April 22, 2013 06:05 AM | 29890 次 | 3
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美國著名金融投資家蘇世民(Stephen A. Schwarzman)21日在北京,宣布捐出1億美元在
北京清華大學設立獎學金,協力助各國優異大學生到中國進修唸書。
路透報導,66歲的蘇世民是美國著名投資公司百仕通(Blackstone,或稱「黑石」)的創辦人,個人資產達65億美元。
中國國家主席習近平、美國總統歐巴馬分別致賀信。中國國務院副總理劉延東出席儀式並致辭。
「蘇世民獎學金」目前還啟動全球募集捐款行動,希望再籌措2億美元資金。
路透指,這意味著「資助蘇世民獎學金」將成為中國境內最大的獎學金項目,而資金則將主要來自中國境外,將與到倫敦進修的「羅茲獎學金」(Rhodes Scholarship)媲美。蘇世民說,他的構想正是來自協助外國學生到英國牛津大學讀書的羅茲獎學金。他說,希望這能緩和中國經濟突然崛起所造成的緊張。
根據計畫,「施瓦茲曼獎學金」從2016年開始,將每年資助200名國際學生到北京接受為期一年的碩士課程,學生將有45%來自美國,但也將包括來自歐洲各國、日本、韓國、以及印度等國家的學生。
他們除學習外,還將廣泛接觸中國社會和文化,以及到中國各地區進行訪問等。
蘇世民指出,中國經濟發展勢頭遠超歐美,這種發展往往會導致不平衡以及緊張,希望透過施瓦茨曼獎學金讓更多的人了解中國,促進中國與世界的互相依存。
蘇世民說:「在21世紀,中國已經不再是選修課,而是核心課程。」他告訴法新社說:「我擔心中國成長速度是西方的兩倍到三倍,將出現緊張關係…需要有人開始起而行,處理誤解和挫折感。」
羅茲獎學金
Oxford and the Rhodes Scholarships