Asia’s Next Generation of Business Leaders Seek More Than Just Profits, Aiming to Establish Their Own Identity

Asia’s Next Generation of Business Leaders Seek More Than Just Profits, Aiming to Establish Their Own Identity

Kuala ‍Lumpur, Malaysia‌ – From Malaysia to Singapore and the Philippines, second- and third-generation family businesses in Asia are charting a different path from ‍their forefathers as they seek out greener and more sustainable investments.

For some millennial business heirs,‍ the journey is smooth. For others, ⁢the gap between their ‍comfortable lives ⁣– which gave them the space to learn about socially​ conscious “impact ‌investing” – and their parents’ experiences of‌ growing up poor has led to conflict.

For some millennial business⁤ heirs, the journey⁢ is smooth. ‍For others, ⁢the gap between their comfortable lives – which‌ gave ⁣them the space to learn about socially conscious “impact investing” – and their parents’ experiences of growing up poor has led to⁢ conflict.

Malaysian Abe Lim, ⁢27, grew up under circumstances far removed from⁤ those of her father,​ who quit school as a teenager to work‍ as a mechanic to support⁢ his family.

Lim’s father⁤ went on to build a business producing lubricants, soap‍ and dish-washing liquid ‍and recruited her into the company as a young woman in ‍the hope she ⁢would take the reins one ⁤day.

But Lim’s youthful ‌idealism⁣ soon clashed with her father’s traditional profit-focused business model.

“I wanted to do something more impactful. My father’s business was traditionally run where the focus is based on profits,” Lim told Al Jazeera.

Original from www.aljazeera.com

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