Jack Ma, Alibaba chairman and China's richest man, was happier earning $12 a month than when he is as a billionaire
When speaking at a luncheon with the Economics Club of New York on Tuesday, Ma referred to his college life as the "best life I had."

Jack Ma, the founder and executive chairman of Alibaba, became the richest man in China after Alibaba IPO'd for a record $25 billion last September.
But Ma was just as happy - perhaps even happier - when he was barely making any money right out of college.
After graduating in 1988, Ma worked as an English teacher at a local university in his hometown of Hangzhou, China. He only made $12 a month, according to the documentary about his life called "Crocodile in the Yangtze."
When speaking at a luncheon with the Economics Club of New York on Tuesday, Ma referred to this period as the "best life I had."
"If you have less than $1 million, you know how to spend the money," he said during Tuesday's speech. " [At] $1 billion, that's not your money...The money I have today is a responsibility. It's the trust of people on me."
Ma says he feels a need to spend his money "on behalf of the society."
"I spend it our way," he said. "It's a trust."
After Alibaba's IPO, he told CNBC that the pressure that comes with the responsibility gets to him, especially now that the world is focusing on Alibaba's stock price.
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