Title: Division of Science Resources Statistics
1 Division of Science Resources Statistics
The Complex National Effects of High-Skilled
Migration Council for Foreign Relations New
York, NY February 18, 2007 Mark Regets National
Science Foundation Arlington Institute for the
Study of Labor (IZA) Bonn (Affiliations for
biographical purposes only) mregets_at_nsf.gov
703-292-7813
2- ETHICAL DISCLAIMER
- (No, not the one that says that my employer does
not necessarily share my views, although that is
also true.) - While it is very useful for policy makers and
social scientists to study the effects of the
movement of highly-skilled migrants - Freedom of movement is a human right that would
have positive value even if all economic effects
were negative. - The greatest benefits of migration accrue to
the individuals choosing to move across borders.
3National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
Changes in how ST is done
- More ST activity of all types is done across
borders - Teams and collaborations physically located in
multiple countries - Both basic research product development
- Global capacity for ST growing rapidly in most
part of the world. - ST capacity much less centralized, U.S. now
less than ¼ of world RD
4Sending Countries Possible Negatives
National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
- Brain drain lost productive capacity due to at
least temporary absence of workers and students
with higher skills - Less support for public funding of higher
education
5National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
Share of college-educated foreign-born
individuals in the
United States who hold foreign degrees 2003
(Percentages)
Highest
Any
degree from
Foreign
foreign
foreign
secondary
university
university
degree
school
Bachelors
47.9
49.7
65.8
Masters
26.8
58.6
74.2
Professional
58.5
63.3
49.5
Doctoral
36.3
78.6
93.0
69.2
All degree levels
41.4
54.8
Source
NSF/SRS 2003 National Survey of College Graduates.
6Sending Countries Possible Positives
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- Increased incentive for natives to seek higher
skills - Possibility of exporting skills, which reduces
risk and raises expected return of personal
education investments - Increase in domestic economic return to skills
- Knowledge flows and collaboration
- Increased ties to foreign research institutions
- Export opportunities for technology
- Return of natives with foreign education and
human capital - Remittances and other support from diaspora
networks
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Relationship of foreign-born U.S. SE doctorate
recipients to their country's scientific
collaboration with United States 199498
graduates and 19992003 articles
SOURCES Thomson ISI, Science Citation Index and
Social Sciences Citation Index,
http//www.isinet.com/products/citation/ ipIQ,
Inc. National Science Foundation, Division of
Science Resources Statistics, Survey of Earned
Doctorates (199498), special tabulations and
National Science Board, Science and Engineering
Indicators, 2006.
8Chinese Student Flows 1985-2005
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Source NSF/SRS analysis of data from the China
National Bureau of Statistics
9Receiving Countries Possible Negatives
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- Decreased incentive of natives to seek higher
skills - Possibility of displacement of native students
from best schools - Language and cultural barriers between native and
immigrant highly skilled workers - Technology transfers to competitors and to
possibly hostile countries
10National Science Foundation
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11Fixed-effects model estimates of the change in
U.S. native SE graduate enrollment associated
with changes in graduate temporary-visa foreign
student enrollment
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An increase of one fulltime foreign student in a
SE graduate department is associated with
0.02 fulltime U.S. citizen/perm. minority
0.33 fulltime U.S. citizen/perm. white - 0.07
full time U.S. citizen/perm. Asian
Model Departmental level fixed effects
controlling for department size in the previous
period, dummy variables for year, and changes in
the enrollment of other groups. Data NSF
Graduate Student Survey, 1982-1995
12National Science Foundation
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13Receiving Countries Possible Positives
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- Increased RD and economic activity due to
availability of additional highly skilled workers
and students. - Knowledge flows and collaboration.
- Increased ties to foreign research institutions.
- Export opportunities for technology.
- Increased enrollment in graduate programs,
possibly keeping smaller programs alive.
14Trends in the percent foreign-born in science and
engineering occupation in the U.S. 1990-2004
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15Number of Postdocs at U.S. Universities by
Citizenship Status
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SOURCE NSF/SRS Survey of Graduate Students and
Postdocs (GSS) 2005
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Multiple Node Knowledge Network
- Increased and more complex flows of students,
workers, and finances - Increased regional ST collaboration and links
between regions - Global and regional labor markets for some skills
- Increased importance of individuals with high
betweennessthose connecting the nodes
17Possible Global Effects
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- Better international flow of knowledge.
- Better job matches through global job search.
- Greater job options for workers and researchers.
- Greater ability of employers to find rare or
unique skill sets. - Formation of international research or technology
clusterse.G., Silicon valley, CERN). - Net positive effect on incentives for individual
human capital investments as a result of
international competition for scarce human
capital.
18National Science Foundation
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Resources NSF Division of Science Resources
Statistics www.nsf.gov/statistics/ Science and
Engineering Indicators 2006 www.nsf.gov/statistic
s/seind06/ Institute for the Study of Labor
(IZA) Discussion Papers www.iza.org Mark
Regets 703-292-7813 mregets_at_nsf.gov
19 Supplemental Slides
20Foreign-born proportion of SE degree holders in
the United States 2003
Source NSF/SRS SESTAT 2003
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Division of Science Resources Statistics
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Is there much of a native-born U.S. Diaspora?
- 485,000 college educated U.S. Citizens found in
2000/2001 censuses of OECD countries (Docquier
2004) - 1.2 million U.S. Individual tax returns filed
abroad (growing at 3.5 annual rate) - 3 percent of U.S. Native-born Ph.D.s in science
and engineering have initial foreign employment
23National Science Foundation
Division of Science Resources Statistics
Simple model of expected value of human capital
when migration is an option
E(H) Pm Ef(H) (1 Pm) Ed(H) where Pm is
the subjective individual probability of
migration Ef is the expected value of human
capital H in the foreign labor market Ed is the
expected value of the same human capital in the
domestic labor market
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25National Science Foundation
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Five-year Stay Rate of 1998 Temporary Visa Ph.D.
Recipients
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Top 11 countries with citizens with at least a
tertiary-level education residing abroad in OECD
countries (2000)
Source Docquier and Marfouk, International
Migration by Educational Attainment (1990-2000),
World Bank
27National Science Foundation
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