首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
I have come here to meet Hiroshi Mikitani, 47-year-old leader of a pack of rebel entrepreneurs that has shaken up business pract
I have come here to meet Hiroshi Mikitani, 47-year-old leader of a pack of rebel entrepreneurs that has shaken up business pract
admin
2012-08-05
35
问题
I have come here to meet Hiroshi Mikitani, 47-year-old leader of a pack of rebel entrepreneurs that has shaken up business practices in Japan. Confident, internationally minded, brash,even flash, they have founded enterprises and wielded business techniques—the hostile takeover, merit-based pay, cut-throat competition and unapologetic self-promotion—that are alien to Japan’s postwar corporation-as-family culture.
Many in Japan find this group distasteful, even un-Japanese. Others regard them as role models for a new Japan. Some, like Takafumi Horie, a dishevelled internet entrepreneur whose briefly dazzling career ended behind bars in 2007 when he was sentenced for securities fraud, have fallen by the wayside. But Mikitani, who in 1997 founded Rakuten, Japan’s largest online retailer, has flourished. He owns nearly half the company, a sort of Japanese Amazon and eBay rolled into one, valued at $14bn. According to Forbes’ latest rich-list, Mikitani is Japan’s fourth-wealthiest person, with a net worth of $6.5bn.
Mikitani arrives. He speaks in English, a language he insists his Japanese employees use as part of what he calls, rather disturbingly, the "Englishisation of Rakuten". It is a policy some in Japan applaud and others condemn as an idiotic charade.
Mikitani tells me about his move, in the mid-1990s, from banking to internet start-up. He had been one of 120 people—117 of them men—recruited to the fast-track team of the Industrial Bank of Japan, then the creme de la creme of Japanese finance. The bank had sent him to study at Harvard Business School, where he encountered brash new American ideas. "I didn’t even know the word ’entrepreneurship’," he says, sounding it out phonetically the way Japanese do when discussing an alien concept. "The first time I heard it I thought: what is this ’entrepreneurship’?"
Though he began to think of striking out on his own, he felt a strong obligation to the bank that had sponsored his Harvard studies and the place where he had met his wife. The final nudge came in January 1995 with the Kobe earthquake. After helping as a volunteer, he was resolved: "I realised anything could happen. Nothing is eternal," he says. He decided to take the plunge—or, in his rather quaint phrase, to "jump off the bridge".
The model is not to link customers to a single big store like Amazon but rather to provide what Mikitani calls individual "shopping experiences". That creates the same sense of connection as "buying fish from your neighbourhood fish shop," he says.
Mikitani says his push at Rakuten has broader ramifications for the country. "Japan is so pleasant. There’s no crime. The food is great. Everything is getting so cheap. You don’t need to learn another language," he says, spreading his arms in metaphorical acknowledgement of the comfortable lifestyle the Japanese have created. "My point is: this is very pleasant long-term decline," he draws out the last word to emphasise the point.
"A language will open your eyes to the ’global’, and you will break free from this conventional wisdom of a pure Japan. English is a tool to globalise you, to make you change."
"We need to be more fluid. Keeping extremely expensive older people when there are lots of very competent, capable young people, this as a system is wrong." He drains his coffee.
He’s not pessimistic, he assures me. With better English, more flexible labour laws, relaxed immigration policies and more investment in science, Japan can bounce back. "We need to fix just a couple of simple things and we’ll have a bright future."
From NPR, June 15,2012
What is not one of the solutions for the economy mentioned by Mikitani?
选项
A、learning English
B、being globally aware
C、flexible labor laws
D、tougher anti-crime laws
答案
D
解析
本题为细节题。在全文中分别提到了答案A、B、C可以作为经济复兴的手段,只有D答案未提及,正确答案为D。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/p7gMFFFM
0
专业英语四级
相关试题推荐
BenjaminFranklinwasthegreatestearlyAmericanleadernevertobecomepresidentoftheUnitedStates,butheservedinmanyo
BenjaminFranklinwasthegreatestearlyAmericanleadernevertobecomepresidentoftheUnitedStates,butheservedinmanyo
Federaleffortstoaidminoritybusinessesbeganinthe1960’swhentheSmallBusinessAdministration(SBA)beganmakingfederal
Federaleffortstoaidminoritybusinessesbeganinthe1960’swhentheSmallBusinessAdministration(SBA)beganmakingfederal
WhydidFrenchofficialmeetwithUnionandstudentleaders?
Withthedevelopmentoftheglobaleconomy,manycompaniesengageinaworldwidemanufacturingbusinessandclaimtheyareamul
Withthedevelopmentoftheglobaleconomy,manycompaniesengageinaworldwidemanufacturingbusinessandclaimtheyareamul
Withthedevelopmentoftheglobaleconomy,manycompaniesengageinaworldwidemanufacturingbusinessandclaimtheyareamul
随机试题
某厂要用铁板做成一个体积为2立方米的有盖长方体水箱,问当长、宽、高各取怎样的尺寸时,才能使用料最省?
《芦川词》是下列哪位词人的词集()
以下()措施与提高组织的道德标准或提升员工的道德修养无关。
能活血消肿,治疗跌扑伤痛的药物是
残髓炎疼痛的特点是
10个月小儿,因高热4天伴反复惊厥入院。体检:体温2℃,神志清,嗜睡,颈部抵抗,心、肺、腹无异常。Kerning征、Brudzinski征阳性,Barbinski征阴性;血常规:白细胞8×109/L,中性0.89,淋巴0.11,脑脊液常规:白细胞1200×
公路工程中,地基承载力基本容许值是指基础短边不大于2.0m,埋置深度()时的地基容许承载力。
阅读以下文字,完成下列题。作为一种文化载体的民间传说或神话并非完全出于古人的想象,而往往以某些史前事件为事实依据。“女娲补天”神话的起源应是源于远古时期一次影响深远的灾害。最近,中南民族大学罗漫提出,著名的神话“女娲炼五色石以补苍天”,是一则典
数据库系统其内部分为3级模式,即概念模式、内模式和外模式。其中,______是用户的数据视图,也就是用户所见到的数据模式。
A、含保险B、不能打折C、可以改签D、是往返机票D
最新回复
(
0
)