Economic empowerment leaders

The associate advantage infographic lays out how middle-skills degrees can lead to economic empowerment through taking a closer look at the U.S. job market. What are the paths to success and how do we prepare our students? 

In a similar vein - Bright ideas, good jobs - the second infographic of the programme, explores how young, innovative firms create economic empowerment. How are entrepreneurs growing their businesses and preparing for the next generation?

Making the connection

For the first few months of Darriale Bradley’s junior year of high school in Macon, Georgia, her mother drove her to the parking lot of a local McDonald’s so that she could do her schoolwork. Without Internet access at home, the fast-food restaurant’s free wifi provided the only feasible way for Bradley to research English papers and watch the YouTube tutorials recommended by her maths teacher.

“We went to the library sometimes, but there was always a wait time and a time limit—usually you’d only get half an hour. I didn’t want to go through all that,” says Ms Bradley.

Crossing the divide, digitally

One recent morning at Kepler Kigali, a non-profit university programme in Rwanda, students faced an interesting problem. Their online healthcare management course was providing excellent training and an opportunity to earn an American college degree, but it also involved the intricacies of the United States’ recently enacted Affordable Care Act—aka Obamacare—and a significant portion of the materials did
not apply to the Rwandan students’ lives or future careers.

The associate advantage

Code for success

When Carlos Alvarez began meeting with CEOs and other Colombian executives in his hometown of Medellin, he could barely believe it was real. Alvarez was a 17-year-old high school student living in one of the city’s most dangerous neighbourhoods. Now he was pitching his business-oriented social media platform, and powerful people were listening.

Bright ideas, good jobs

Identifying a better future

When Pakistani officials travelled to the country’s poorest and most remote regions to encourage citizens to register for identity cards, they encountered a problem: Many men did not want their wives to participate.

The registration process employs biometric technology, which uses fingerprint scans and facial recognition software to create unique identity profiles that can be uploaded onto cards or databases. Tariq Malik, who ran the campaign for Pakistan’s National Database & Registration Authority (NADRA), said this process made many husbands uncomfortable.

Back on track: Fed rate rise signals confidence in US economy

US interest rates on the rise

The economic impact of energy storage

The ability to store energy effectively has the potential to revolutionise the energy market – and the global economy too

M&A: The comeback kid

M&A activity poised for recovery in 2014, finds EIU survey

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