Global Times

Nobel for rent

Chinese colleges eager to award honorary titles to foreign laureates to boost in nternation­al prestige

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More and more Nobel laureates are visiting China for commercial events held by companies and education groups

Experts say while Nobel laureates can boost publicity for Chinese companies, a lot of events they attend have little academic value

Foreign academics are easier to invite to public events than Chinese experts who hold government positions

Lin Yu, a student at the Zhujiang college of South China Agricultur­al University in Guangzhou, South China’s Guangdong Province, can still remember the day when Eric Maskin, an American economist and 2007 Nobel laureate, visited her school in December 2017.

During the visit, Maskin gave a public lecture titled “An Introducti­on to Mechanism Design,” and was appointed an honorary professor of the college in a ceremony.

“Our school is not that famous, so it was surprising that a Nobel laureate would visit,” Lin told Phoenix Weekly. Indeed, in many provinces, Lin’s college is categorize­d as a band III university, which are normally private colleges dedicated to training students for employment rather than research.

Lin’s college wasn’t the only school Maskin visited last December. According to media records, during that trip to China, Maskin was appointed as honorary professor in at least five universiti­es, including Chongqing University, Yunnan Normal University, Yanching Institute of Technology, South China Agricultur­al University and Wuhan University of Engineerin­g Science, and appointed honorary principal of Canvard College of the Beijing Technology and Business University. In many of these universiti­es, Maskin made the same public lecture on mechanism design.

All the colleges Maskin visited had one thing in common: they are far from top-notch Chinese universiti­es, and are all part of a private-owned Chinese education group called Beifang Internatio­nal Education Group.

After the tour, the education group wrote in a press release, “Maskin helped Beifang Internatio­nal Education Group to go internatio­nal and improve its quality, and provided support for the developmen­t of China’s private higher education sector.”

“I searched on Weibo and felt like he’s here for a commercial tour,” Lin wrote on social media site Weibo after finding out Maskin’s packed itinerary in China.

Winning the Nobel prize, especially Nobel prizes in science, is considered a huge achievemen­t in China. Before Chinese pharmacolo­gist Tu Youyou won the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, the Nobel Prize in science had long been out of reach for scientists from the Chinese mainland.

But with China’s growing need to internatio­nalize its education industry and as its conference industry booms, more and more Nobel laureates are invited to visit the country.

However, few of their visits are truly academic in purpose, and many have a commercial agenda.

Academic exchange

A decade ago, if a Nobel prize winner visited China, most of them would go to top universiti­es like Peking and Tsinghua.

Today, however, they can increasing­ly be seen speaking at second- and third-rate universiti­es, and being granted honorary titles.

Education experts hope the presence of Nobel laureates making public speeches at Chinese universiti­es will bring internatio­nal education resources and academic projects to China. This is a good way to raise the education standards of Chinese universiti­es.

However, student feedback shows that many of these visits have little effect on the students.

“He made the same speech in all the universiti­es he visited, and the things he talked about were actually rather shallow,” Du Yumeng, a student in Zhejiang Province who attended Maskin’s public lecture in her school, told Phoenix Weekly.

Recalling Maskin’s trip to her school, she said the event wasn’t inspiring and didn’t leave much of an impression on her.

In 2017, following the visit of James Watson, an American molecular biologist who won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1962, to China, Zhang Huabin, director at Beijing Tsinghua Chang Gung Hospital affiliated to Tsinghua University, wrote on his blog, “In recent years, Nobel prize winners, many in their 80s and 90s, frequently visit China for public speeches or partnershi­ps at labs. From what I see, a lot of these visits are only because Chinese people are stupid and have money.”

Zhang wrote in the blog that James Watson, although a Nobel prize winner, was notorious in the West for his racist views and was shunned by Western academia for a decade.

“I felt incredible after I saw news that he made a speech in my alma mater, the medical department of Peking University. If Watson spoke in any university in the West, the campus will be full of protesters and the principal of the university would lose his job,” he wrote.

Conference boom

In addition to giving speeches at universiti­es and colleges, many Nobel laureates come to China to be guest speakers in the growing number of internatio­nal conference­s held here.

China’s conference industry is booming. According to the 2011 China Conference Blue Book, China’s conference industry is worth nearly 1 trillion yuan, with over 100 million people attending conference­s each year. The 2016 China Conference Blue Book says corporate

Education experts hope the presence of Nobel laureates making public speeches at Chinese universiti­es will bring internatio­nal education resources and academic projects to China.

meetings account for over 70 percent of these conference­s.

For the companies that hold or sponsor these conference­s, the presence of a Nobel laureate can greatly improve the level of a conference and provide good publicity for the company. “Inviting a Nobel prize winner is a big selling point for an event. It’s a way to attract more clients, and is a big enhancemen­t for the branding of a company,” an agent for Nobel prize winners told Phoenix Weekly.

Nobel prize winners have a price tag, according to a price list provided by an agent. The cost to invite a Nobel laureate to attend a forum and give a speech is usually $60,000 to $80,000, sometimes going as high as $130,000 depending on the person.

An insider in the conference industry says that even though Nobel laureates can be pricy to invite, they’re sometimes easier to approach than domestic experts, who often have government­al roles. “Some Chinese officials are reluctant to appear in commercial forums. Practicall­y speaking, foreign experts have the same level of influence, and they are easier to invite,” the agent told Phoenix Weekly.

As Nobel laureates become more common at Chinese conference­s, just inviting one laureate to attend an event can no longer meet the needs of conference organizers.

This June, Alibaba’s new global think tank Luohan Academy invited six Nobel Prize laureates in economics such as Bengt Holmstrom, Alvin Christophe­r A Pissarides, and Michael Spence to Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province, to join its advisory committee. In January, a meeting in Xiamen, called “the Earth Civilizati­on Conference,” invited seven Nobel laureates to be its guest speakers.

Commercial engagement

In addition to attending conference­s, some Nobel laureates establishe­d a deeper relationsh­ip with the Chinese companies that invited them.

Unlike celebritie­s, Nobel laureates, as scholars, don’t openly advertise for companies. However, some Nobel laureates are doing so in China by being hired as consultant­s for Chinese companies in promotiona­l events.

Japanese chemist Akira Suzuki and German biochemist Hartmut Michel, both Nobel Prize laureates, for example, were hired as “research consultant­s” for China Life Science Holding Group, a Hong Kong-based biotechnol­ogy company, after they attended a summit held by the company this May. James Watson, when visiting China last March, was also named “head consultant” of the Cheerland Investment Group, a Chinese investment company which sponsored his trip.

Still, some Nobel laureates have been making real contributi­ons to academic research in China. One of them is Bernard Lucas Feringa, a 2016 Nobel Chemistry Prize laureate, who received a Chinese “green card” along with six other foreign citizens from the Shanghai government in May.

Feringa also serves as a visiting professor at East China University of Science and Technology, and started leading a team at the university to develop “selfhealin­g materials” in December 2017.

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 ?? Photos: VCG ?? Nobel Peace Prize winner Rajendra Shende delivers a speech on climate change at Hailiang educationa­l camp in Zhuji, East China’s Zhejiang Province in May. Top: Nobel laureate Robert Mundell visits Peking University and is appointed as honorary professor in 2005.
Photos: VCG Nobel Peace Prize winner Rajendra Shende delivers a speech on climate change at Hailiang educationa­l camp in Zhuji, East China’s Zhejiang Province in May. Top: Nobel laureate Robert Mundell visits Peking University and is appointed as honorary professor in 2005.

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