Originally published in the inaugural edition of Carroll Capital, the print publication of the Carroll School of Management at Boston College. .
Where do conversations about finance veer into subjects like the war in Ukraine, the challenges posed by climate change, and even the whole system of meritocracy in the United States? One answer: the annual Finance Conference presented by the Carroll School of Management.
Bringing together financial services professionals, policy makers, scholars, and others, the conference looks beyond money matters. It links finance and the economy to big questions about society, the environment, and international affairs.
For example, explaining how globalization is in retreat and regional instability is on the rise, Harvard University鈥檚 Meghan O鈥橲ullivan told the gathering on May 12: 鈥淭he world is moving to a place where it will be impossible to maximize your success andminimize your failures without a deep understanding of policy and geopolitics.鈥
Delivering the keynote to a business-casual audience that crowded Robsham Theater, bestselling author Malcolm Gladwell听ripped into the idea of meritocracy鈥攖he belief that success is solely a product of individual talent and effort.
Gladwell parsed out a bundle of case studies suggesting otherwise, while he acknowledged that top performers in finance and other fields undoubtedly cherish the meritocratic notion. His cases involved athletes, third-graders identified as 鈥済ifted,鈥 surgeons, and others who succeeded at least partly because of random circumstances (like being born early in the year or belonging to a talented team) that led institutions to bestow them with special rewards and recognition.
鈥淎chievement isn鈥檛 just about cognitive ability,鈥 Gladwell said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 powerfully shaped by context.鈥
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Speakers at the 16th annual Finance Conference also highlighted specific developments on the horizon.
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Lawrence Makovich, MCAS鈥77, P 鈥05
Energy and environmental expert, author, and instructor
There鈥檚 鈥渘o chance of a low-cost transition to renewable energy鈥 in the fight against climate change, Makovich said, adding that this transition will also be inflationary. His good news was that the world has already made progress toward reducing harmful greenhouse gas emissions, by shifting from oil to cleaner natural gas in recent decades.
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Richard Clarida
Managing Director and Global Economic Advisor at PIMCO, Vice Chair of the Federal Reserve (2018鈥2022), and C. Lowell Harriss Professor of Economics and International Affairs at Columbia University
The Federal Reserve seems poised to cut interest rates by the end of the year, as inflation falls to a tolerable level and the nation likely slips into a mild-to-moderate recession, said Clarida.
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Marc Seidner 鈥88, P 鈥24
Chief Investment Officer of Non-traditional Strategies and Managing Director at PIMCO鈥檚 Newport Beach office
For investors, 鈥淭here鈥檚 no doubt that we鈥檙e heading into a much more treacherous economic environment,鈥 Seidner observed, citing recession worries.
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Richard Bernstein
Chief Executive Officer/Chief Investment Officer of Richard Bernstein Advisors LLC.
The growing share of the federal budget going to service the national debt will eventually 鈥渃ause us to both raise taxes and cut spending,鈥 Bernstein predicted.