FDIC Chairman
Powell Inspires Smith Students
 |
|
Donald E.
Powell, Chairman of the
FDIC, talks to students,
faculty, and staff of the
Smith School about
"Leadership, Ethics, and the
Free Market." |
On Wednesday, April 28, the Smith
School proudly welcomed Donald E.
Powell, chairman of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC), to deliver
an address to its business students.
Chairman Powell's speech,
"Leadership, Ethics, and the Free
Market," captivated the audience of
Smith undergraduate, graduate, and
doctoral finance students. Powell
defined leadership with five common
threads: a sense of purpose, good
relationships, self-discipline,
competitiveness, and passion.
"Where do you want to be in life five
or ten years from now?" Powell said that
to be successful leaders, students must
have a clear purpose of what they want
to do with their lives. "Leadership also
means developing good relationships and
getting along with people," he declared.
"It's critical to learn how to give and
take." You may have an impressive
academic background and great
professional credentials, but if you
can't get along with your fellow man,
you won't get hired, he added.
"Self-discipline means aiming for
excellence in our physical, spiritual,
and intellectual lives," Powell
explained. "Excellence is not an
act-it's a habit. We are what we repeat.
Strive for self-discipline in your
actions and your thoughts, young men and
young women. Get the junk out of your
mind," he reiterated, urging students
not to develop bad habits. "Spiritually,
who you are is not in the mind," he
warned, pointing to his head, "but in
your heart and soul. Herein lies the
wellspring of life," he declared,
pointing to his heart. "Leaders are
driven here."
Powell advised that "competition in
the marketplace is very fierce today, so
you must be technically competent to
survive. Leaders love to win-they're
competitive. Leaders aspire to be the
best, so compare yourselves with the
best," he encouraged. Don't be satisfied
with average peer reviews; always aim
higher, he said.
Powell saved the best definition of
leadership for last-undying passion-and
he embodied it. Leaning toward the
audience, he proclaimed, "We're fighting
a war on terrorism and two battles. 9/11
was a defining moment in American
history, and this country will never be
the same."
The
first battle we fight daily is for free
enterprise and capitalism, which are in
jeopardy, Powell said. "It's good-not
evil-to make money. In fact, making
money is morally correct," he reminded
the business students. "Mr. Robert H.
Smith gave to this business school a
$15-million check driven by profits he
earned in the free enterprise system-and
you are the beneficiaries of his profit
margin," and his generosity, he implied.
"It's not the government's role to
dictate how much money you make," he
cautioned. With unswerving confidence in
capitalism, he added, "The free market
will determine that."
The second battle we face is the one
for moral clarity, Powell said. "What's
important to you? What do you want to be
remembered by?" he asked, referring to
the prior financial economics
discussion. "Money is not more important
than your principles, so be clear about
these and know your values," he
declared. A passionate Powell motivated
the captive crowd with these inspiring
final words, "I believe in you-America
believes in you," as the audience gave
him a loud round of applause.
Powell fielded questions from the
audience. One question concerned the
intersection of free enterprise and its
ethical implications-how do you
reconcile them? "You must have moral
clarity and proper values," he
reiterated. "Create an accountability to
your own conscience based on good
friendships, trust, and integrity. And
be strong in your convictions," he
urged.
A doctoral student asked about
current assertions that executive
salaries and bonuses are exorbitant:
"What are the industry benchmarks for
CEO compensation?" Intrigued by the
topic, Powell exclaimed, "The
marketplace is the checks-and-balances
for that. Transparency is the solution,
and disclosure is a duty. I'm 62 years
old, and I make $138,000 a year." With
sound, practical advice, he recommended,
"Read your proxy statements to find out
which stocks your company invests in,
your industry peers invest in, and what
the management owns. These will tell you
a lot."
"Leadership,
ethics, and free markets are critical
paradigms in the running of a
market-based economy." said Haluk Unal,
professor of finance at Smith.
(pictured right with Powell at the
event). "Chairman Powell's talk on
leadership and business ethics was quite
timely and thought-provoking. Smith
students had a great chance to meet an
all-American business and public
leader."
The event was co-sponsored by Smith's
Finance Department and the Finance
Banking Investment Society, an
undergraduate student organization.
For Chairman Powell's biography,
visit
www.fdic.gov.