logo
#

Latest news with #PoliticsandEconomics

Rishi Sunak education qualification: When Oxford bred the thinker and Stanford built the strategist
Rishi Sunak education qualification: When Oxford bred the thinker and Stanford built the strategist

Time of India

time09-07-2025

  • Business
  • Time of India

Rishi Sunak education qualification: When Oxford bred the thinker and Stanford built the strategist

Rishi Sunak What if leadership wasn't forged in corridors of power, but in quiet libraries, late-night study groups, and classrooms where the stakes were ideas, not elections? Before Rishi Sunak found himself juggling the UK economy and navigating global politics, he was a student making choices that would quietly define the way he thinks, leads, and governs. His education, stretching from the timeworn traditions of Winchester and Oxford to the innovation-fuelled energy of Stanford, wasn't a straight line to politics. It was a carefully woven map of curiosity, ambition, and cross-continental learning. And in many ways, it tells you more about the man behind the policies than any political résumé ever could. Winchester: Where the questions began Rishi Sunak's academic path began not with a campaign strategy, but at Winchester College, one of Britain's oldest and most intellectually demanding schools. This wasn't the kind of place where students coasted through on charm and polished grammar. Winchester was designed to stretch its students. It demanded deep reflection, academic rigor, and the kind of intellectual patience most teenagers do not yet know they are capable of. Here, Rishi Sunak encountered ideas that refused easy answers. He developed his early fascination with the structure of arguments, governance, and economic systems. Though the school's curriculum leaned classical, the approach to thinking was far from dated. Students were encouraged to question, to debate and occasionally to discard long-held beliefs. These years sowed the seeds of what would later become a hallmark of his leadership style: an ability to absorb complexity without losing clarity. Oxford: The laboratory of leadership If Winchester sparked the questions, Oxford taught him how to pursue them with discipline. At Lincoln College, Oxford, Rishi Sunak studied Philosophy, Politics and Economics (PPE), a degree synonymous with British leadership. But PPE wasn't about memorising facts or aligning with ideologies. It was about disassembling complex realities to understand how they actually work. Rishi Sunak learned to interrogate policy, trace the moral undercurrents of political decisions, and anticipate the consequences of economic moves. The lectures were only one part of the education. Just as formative were the heated discussions in seminar rooms and the quiet hours spent decoding the writings of economists and philosophers. Oxford also taught him how to live in the grey. It was an environment where conflicting theories could both be valid and where intellectual flexibility was not a luxury but a necessity. The ability to toggle between perspectives, whether economic or ethical, would later prove indispensable as he navigated high-stakes decisions during national crises. Stanford: The shift from theory to traction After Oxford's stone libraries came something radically different. At Stanford Graduate School of Business, set in the pulse of Silicon Valley, Rishi Sunak found himself in a world that moved fast and thought globally. He had traded historic halls for glass-walled innovation labs and traditional lectures for start-up pitches. His MBA experience was a conscious leap into a new way of thinking. Stanford didn't just value business acumen. It prioritised experimentation, collaboration, and impact. Rishi Sunak studied alongside a multicultural cohort where classroom conversations often turned into prototype ideas. The focus was not just on what worked in the past, but on what could be designed for the future. At Stanford, risk was not feared but studied. Entrepreneurship was not confined to tech start-ups; it was a mindset applied to public service, healthcare, finance, and education. For Rishi Sunak, this broadened his understanding of leadership. He saw how innovation intersects with governance and how policy can be shaped to serve the next decade, not just the next quarter. He also built relationships with peers who brought varied perspectives, from product designers and venture capitalists to social impact leaders. These networks became part of his extended learning, long after formal education ended. From education to execution After Stanford, Rishi Sunak did not take a detour. He transitioned seamlessly from theory to practice. He worked as an analyst at Goldman Sachs and later joined the hedge fund TCI, before co-founding Theleme Partners. These roles called for interpreting risk, predicting market behaviour, and understanding how global economies are interlinked. This phase was not just about finance, it was about sharpening his decision-making and applying the analytical tools he had gathered over the years. When Rishi Sunak became Chancellor of the Exchequer during the COVID-19 pandemic, those years became highly relevant. Designing emergency relief schemes, evaluating fiscal trade-offs, and communicating economic decisions to the public — all required the ability to act quickly without compromising on clarity. His academic and professional past gave him a rare blend of confidence and caution. Lessons for learners today Rishi Sunak's academic journey is not important because of institutional prestige alone. What makes it valuable is the intent behind every decision. Winchester trained him in discipline and intellectual stamina. Oxford helped him build frameworks to understand governance and ethics. Stanford gave him global fluency, entrepreneurial courage and strategic range. In an era where students are often guided by rankings, placements or peer pressure, his journey offers a quieter but stronger lesson: choose learning environments that challenge your certainty and refine your instincts. Seek mentors and peers who teach you to think from multiple vantage points. Allow education to be not just a bridge to opportunity, but a compass that keeps your direction honest. As Rishi Sunak once wrote, 'Improving education is the closest thing to a silver bullet there is. There is no better economic policy, no better social policy and no better moral policy than a world-class education.' His own life is living proof of that belief. He did not simply pass through prestigious institutions. He allowed them to shape his instincts, stretch his thinking and prepare him to lead in unpredictable times. For today's students and professionals, that is perhaps the most important takeaway: education is not a checklist. When pursued with purpose, it becomes the most valuable preparation for the future you cannot yet see. TOI Education is on WhatsApp now. Follow us here . Ready to navigate global policies? Secure your overseas future. Get expert guidance now!

Meet Charithra Chandran: The British-Indian actor who stole the spotlight from Andrew Garfield and Monica Barbaro at Wimbledon
Meet Charithra Chandran: The British-Indian actor who stole the spotlight from Andrew Garfield and Monica Barbaro at Wimbledon

Time of India

time09-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

Meet Charithra Chandran: The British-Indian actor who stole the spotlight from Andrew Garfield and Monica Barbaro at Wimbledon

It wasn't the viral kiss between Hollywood stars and that grabbed all the attention at Centre Court this Wimbledon Sunday. Instead, someone quietly stunning on the sidelines stole the show, British-Indian actor , who charmed everyone with her style and grace. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now The quiet star who turned heads at Wimbledon Among all the flashing cameras, Chandran stood calm and elegant in her Wimbledon whites, with lovely curls that reminded fans of her 'Bridgerton' character Edwina Sharma. The photographers may have missed her at first, but fashion lovers and people on social media were quick to spot her. Charithra, who is 28, wore a crisp white button-down shirt with a racing green cashmere sweater over it, buttery lambskin shorts and smart Nappa leather pumps. Her look was stylish without trying too hard — full of quiet confidence. She posted her look and wrote,'Edwina inspired hair for Wimbledon today with Ralph Lauren.' That one line was enough to get lots of love online, proving once again that Charithra isn't just an actor, she's fast becoming a real style icon. The Oxford brain with a 'Bridgerton' heart Charithra was born to Tamil doctor parents from India and grew up in Oxford. From a young age, she balanced two very different worlds the push for academic success and her own love for performing. As the only child of two busy doctors from , Charithra spent much of her early life at boarding schools while her parents worked in hospitals. She went to prep school at six and filled her days with county-level hockey and netball, along with many school plays. She also grew up speaking both English and Tamil at home. Looking back, she told the BBC, 'Since I was born, I've always been a performer, whether it's little dances, singalongs, plays, and they loved it. So I'm like: what did you guys expect?' Even so, her parents were a bit unsure at first about her acting dreams. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now From Oxford books to 'Bridgerton' fame Charithra didn't let her love for acting stop her from doing well in school. She studied at a top private girls' school and then went to Oxford University, where she earned a first-class degree in Philosophy, Politics and Economics (PPE). After finishing university, she was meant to join an international consultancy firm. But deep down, something didn't feel right. 'I had this niggling feeling,' she shared. 'I became introspective about what I wanted to achieve and what I would regret. I was like, 'I have to give acting a go.'' The pandemic made her rethink life even more. Watching her parents go to hospitals every day during the health crisis pushed her to take a chance. She started emailing agents, carefully choosing Monday mornings at 9:05 AM so they'd see her messages first. It worked. In just two months, she landed a part in 'Alex Rider'. Even before filming finished, she had already bagged the role that would make her famous around the world — Edwina Sharma in 'Bridgerton' Season 2. Winning hearts as Edwina Sharma In 'Bridgerton' season 2, Charithra played Edwina Sharma, the gentle younger sister caught up in love and family drama in London's high society of the 1800s. Fans loved how sweet and real she made the character. It didn't take long for people to start wondering what she'd do next. Taking on new worlds Since her big break in 'Bridgerton', Charithra has been busy with all sorts of exciting work. She voiced a character in 'Star Wars: Visions' and appeared in 'Dune: Prophecy'.Next, she'll be in something very different, a Bollywood-inspired musical film called 'Christmas Karma'. It's a new take on 'A Christmas Carol'. The film also stars Eva Longoria, Billy Porter, Hugh Bonneville and Boy George

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store