Lokomotive Germany

Germany is one of the few countries where they actually want to hire MBA grads

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An engine for growth?
An engine for growth?

With unemployment across the Eurozone now hovering just over 10%, more and more business school graduates in Europe are having a tough time re-entering the job market.


But a closer look at the figures reveals striking differences in rates of recovery across individual Eurozone countries and must surely be creating headaches for policy makers at the European Central Bank deciding how to set interest rates in the future.
 

Take Germany, for instance. While the unemployment rate in the Eurozone overall has increased from the record low of 7.2% set in January 2008 to over 10%, the German unemployment rate has actually decreased during this period, from 7.8% to 7.6%, an almost two decade low.
 

“There is a very high demand for highly qualified managers in Germany these days, and this trend is likely to continue and even intensify”, according to Professor Joerg Rocholl, Ernst and Young Chaired Professor of Finance at the European School of Management and Technology (ESMT).
 

In an article on July 28th in the Wall Street Journal’s “The Source” Blog, David Cottle comments that the rise in July of another major indicator, BNP Paribas’s Purchasing Managers Index, was led by Germany.
 

The Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) is an indicator of economic activity and reflects the percentage of purchasing managers in a certain economic sector reporting better business conditions than in the previous month.
 

“This supports our long-held view that we will continue to see a two-speed euro area, with notable outperformance by countries like Germany, which continues to benefit from the strength of its manufacturing sector,” said BNP. This latest data shows that Germany is again assuming its traditional role of being the “locomotive” of economic growth in Europe.
 

All in all, this is great news for business school students and graduates who are looking to study or work in Germany. At present the job market for highly qualified workforce seems to be very tight, working in favour of business school graduates with solid professional experience.
 

At ESMT European School of Management and Technology in Berlin, over 90% of MBA students who graduated in December 2009 were in employment by March 2010. Over 60% of these graduates found employment in Germany.


The graduates also benefited from ESMT`s powerful company network. The school was founded by 25 major German global players such as Allianz, E.ON, Deutsche Bank, Lufthansa and Siemens.
 

Nick Barniville is Director of ESMT MBA Programs. ESMT’s next MBA Program starts in January 2011, and applications are now open. More info on www.esmt.org/mba.

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1 August 2011
 

hi,
I have done my MBA & BBA.I badly need a job,please give me a chance to prove myself.
With best regards
Arnab Chaudhuri.


Arnab Chaudhuri

13 August 2010
 

but if there are good jobs going in germany ist sehr gut


 

i'd rather be on the dole in germany than employed in most of the crappy mcjobs on offer in britain and america


12 August 2010
 

I lived in Germany for 1 year (admittedly some time ago) and feel the country has the internal efficiency and infrastructure to be a strong manufacturing economy again


 

definitely an advantage if your school has good contacts with big corporates who actively hire mbas... not so easy otherwise - i have lots of mba friends struggling to get the type of job they want...


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Nick Barniville
By Nick Barniville
11/08/2010

Tags:

Jobs
Germany

Joerg Rocholl
European Central Bank

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