目前共有7篇帖子。 字体大小:较小 - 100% (默认)▼  内容转换:不转换▼
 
点击 回复
85 6
On Wisconsin magazine: On, Singapore
UTC+01:00
JosephHeinrich
项目副经理 二十三级
1楼 发表于:2025-2-4 18:05
Prime Minister Lawrence Wong ’94 brings Badger sensibilities to his role.

By Esther Seidlitz

UTC+01:00
JosephHeinrich
项目副经理 二十三级
2楼 发表于:2025-2-4 18:08

A few decades before Lawrence Wong ’94 took his place as Singapore’s fourth prime minister in 2024, he was zooming around New Glarus and Devil’s Lake on his motorcycle and plucking his guitar on State Street. He was also studying economics at UW–Madison and learning some foundational lessons — ones that would later come in handy for leading a nation.

Wong enrolled at the UW after earning a scholarship from Singapore’s Public Service Commission. “Back then, I had never traveled outside of Southeast Asia,” he says. “I could not afford an overseas education all the way in America. The scholarship was an opportunity of a lifetime.”

He then completed his master’s in applied economics at the University of Michigan in 1995 before returning to Singapore to work as an economist for the Ministry of Trade and Industry. He didn’t intend to stay in the public sector, but the work drew him in.

“Initially, I thought I might leave after a while and pursue a career in finance. But eventually, I found my calling in public service,” Wong says. “The work was meaningful and fulfilling, and it was work that I could never do in the private sector.”

As a greenhorn economist, he began his career with an assignment to study the 1997 Asian financial crisis. “The gap between textbook theory and real-world economics was stark. I found myself suddenly thrust in an environment where I had to learn on the go,” Wong says. “But my time at UW–Madison provided me with excellent foundations to adapt and to navigate those turbulent times.”

Wong took on several more civil service roles in the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Health before running for political office in 2011, when he first became a member of parliament. Throughout more than a decade in Singaporean politics, Wong served in a variety of cabinet positions, including minister for education, minister for finance, and minister for national development.

In 2022, as deputy prime minister, Wong launched an initiative that should strike a chord with Wisconsinites: “Forward Singapore.” Now prime minister, he is continuing to build an agenda reminiscent of the Wisconsin Idea and the state motto. As he said in a speech last August, “Forward Singapore is … to keep our society strong and united; to share the benefits of progress with all, not just some; to uplift all Singaporeans, not just a few.”

UTC+01:00
JosephHeinrich
项目副经理 二十三级
2楼 发表于:2025-2-4 18:08

A few decades before Lawrence Wong ’94 took his place as Singapore’s fourth prime minister in 2024, he was zooming around New Glarus and Devil’s Lake on his motorcycle and plucking his guitar on State Street. He was also studying economics at UW–Madison and learning some foundational lessons — ones that would later come in handy for leading a nation.

Wong enrolled at the UW after earning a scholarship from Singapore’s Public Service Commission. “Back then, I had never traveled outside of Southeast Asia,” he says. “I could not afford an overseas education all the way in America. The scholarship was an opportunity of a lifetime.”

He then completed his master’s in applied economics at the University of Michigan in 1995 before returning to Singapore to work as an economist for the Ministry of Trade and Industry. He didn’t intend to stay in the public sector, but the work drew him in.

“Initially, I thought I might leave after a while and pursue a career in finance. But eventually, I found my calling in public service,” Wong says. “The work was meaningful and fulfilling, and it was work that I could never do in the private sector.”

As a greenhorn economist, he began his career with an assignment to study the 1997 Asian financial crisis. “The gap between textbook theory and real-world economics was stark. I found myself suddenly thrust in an environment where I had to learn on the go,” Wong says. “But my time at UW–Madison provided me with excellent foundations to adapt and to navigate those turbulent times.”

Wong took on several more civil service roles in the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Health before running for political office in 2011, when he first became a member of parliament. Throughout more than a decade in Singaporean politics, Wong served in a variety of cabinet positions, including minister for education, minister for finance, and minister for national development.

In 2022, as deputy prime minister, Wong launched an initiative that should strike a chord with Wisconsinites: “Forward Singapore.” Now prime minister, he is continuing to build an agenda reminiscent of the Wisconsin Idea and the state motto. As he said in a speech last August, “Forward Singapore is … to keep our society strong and united; to share the benefits of progress with all, not just some; to uplift all Singaporeans, not just a few.”

UTC+01:00
JosephHeinrich
项目副经理 二十三级
3楼 发表于:2025-2-4 18:08
UTC+01:00
JosephHeinrich
项目副经理 二十三级
4楼 发表于:2025-2-4 18:09

As prime minister, Wong is building an agenda reminiscent of the Wisconsin Idea.MINISTRY OF DIGITAL DEVELOPMENT AND INFORMATION

UTC+01:00
JosephHeinrich
项目副经理 二十三级
5楼 发表于:2025-2-4 18:10

Published in the Winter 2024 issue


UTC+01:00
JosephHeinrich
项目副经理 二十三级
6楼 发表于:2025-2-4 18:10
回复5楼 @JosephHeinrich 的内容:
Published in the Winter 2024 issue
https://onwisconsin.uwalumni.com/issues/winter-2024/
UTC+01:00
JosephHeinrich
项目副经理 二十三级
7楼 发表于:2025-2-4 18:11
The link to the original article: https://onwisconsin.uwalumni.com/on-singapore/

回复帖子

内容:
用户名: 您目前是匿名发表
验证码:
(快捷键:Ctrl+Enter)
 

本帖信息

点击数:85 回复数:6
评论数: ?
作者:JosephHeinrich
最后回复:JosephHeinrich
最后回复时间:2025-2-4 18:11
 
©2010-2025 Arslanbar Ver2.0
除非另有声明,本站采用知识共享署名-相同方式共享 3.0 Unported许可协议进行许可。