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						Blackstone's Schwarzman 
						launches ambitious scholars program in China 
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		 [September 10, 2016] 
		By Matthew Miller 
 BEIJING (Reuters) - When Blackstone Group 
		Co-founder and Chief Executive Stephen Schwarzman was asked by the 
		president of China's elite Tsinghua University to design a major 
		initiative for the school, the private equity billionaire decided to aim 
		high.
 
 His target, Schwarzman told Reuters, was "the future relationship 
		between China, which is rising in power very rapidly, and the rest of 
		the world."
 
 Schwarzman hit upon the idea of creating a one-year Master's degree 
		program, the Schwarzman Scholars, to bring together 200 "future leaders" 
		from China and the world in a hothouse environment of academics, 
		cultural immersion and dialogue.
 
 Schwarzman, in Beijing this week to launch the program at the newly 
		built Schwarzman College at Tsinghua University, will be flanked at an 
		inaugural ceremony on Saturday by U.S. Ambassador to China Max Baucus, 
		former Prime Minister of Australia Kevin Rudd and Chinese government 
		officials.
 
 This year’s inaugural class includes 110 students from over 30 
		countries, with more than 40 percent from the United States and 20 
		percent from China.
 
		
		 
		For Schwarzman, whose close ties to China date back a decade when China 
		Investment Corp [CIC.UL] forked out $3 billion for a stake in his 
		company, defusing misunderstandings between the world's second-biggest 
		economy and the West is crucial, especially at a time when a populist 
		backlash threatens to derail cross-border economic and trade relations.
 Schwarzman kicked in the first $100 million and later raised the 
		program's endowment to $435 million, with contributions from more than 
		70 global companies and industrialists including BP PLC, Delta Air Lines 
		Inc, EMC Corp and Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
 
 "The pitch is really global stability and access to China, not 
		particularly for the people who give money but for the system," said 
		Schwarzman.
 
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			Stephen Schwarzman, Chairman, CEO and Co-Founder of Blackstone, 
			speaks at the Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly Hills, 
			California, U.S., May 3, 2016. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson 
            
			 
Former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, former British Prime Minister 
Tony Blair, former President of France Nicolas Sarkozy, and former World Bank 
President James Wolfensohn lead an A-list group of high-powered advisers to help 
oversee the program, modeled on the Rhodes Scholarship.
 Blackstone, which looked after $356 billion assets as of end-June, counts 
Chinese institutions and individuals as an important and growing source of 
revenue.
 
 "In terms of overall touch, we're by far the largest manager of alternative 
assets for Chinese institutions investing around the world," Schwarzman said.
 
 But the scholarship program "has nothing to do with the business," he said. "If 
I wanted to help my business, I wouldn’t spend as much time as I was doing 
Schwarzman scholars and I would have kept my own money."
 
 "I want the world to be a safer place," Schwarzman said. "I want to help gifted 
students take their role in society."
 
 (Reporting by Matthew Miller; Editing by Ryan Woo and Christopher Cushing)
 
				 
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