I was reading the "48 laws of power" and the first law was about not outshining the man in charge. The example of a transgression of this law was Louis the XIV, whose finance minister was brilliant at manipulating the treasury and was punished for having behavior that was too lavish. King Louis the XIV was a young and insecure king and therefore one could not afford to make him jealous, even with generosity.
The lesson I took away from this example, which was not the lesson that was intended, is that if you want people to feel free to display their talents, you must prevent those who have no skills from attaining any sort of prominence. Basically, if you want your country to flourish, you must make sure that there are no King Louis XIV's. Zakharov would obviously place a premium on creating an open market for talent, and so the University would, consciously or unconsciously, obstruct the advancement of anyone who both
1. Lacks talent
and
2. is prone to envy
which leaves out, oh, 97% of people. That means no Committees on Bureaucratic Redundancy, 50 vice presidents at every company, or dinner with the Academician in return for hefty donations or town hall meetings or well-funded "civil rights" organizations or any number of the other million ways people inflate their importance in our society.