Title: BRAIN DRAIN OR BRAIN GAIN MIGRATION OF ELITES
1- BRAIN DRAIN OR BRAIN GAIN? MIGRATION OF ELITES
2What is Brain Drain?
- Mass departure of skilled labour, usually
from developing or transition countries into
industrial ones - (Martin)
-
3What is skilled labour International Standard
Classification of Education (ISCED97)
- ISCED 0 pre-primary education
- ISCED 1 primary education (or the first stage of
basic education) - ISCED 2 lower secondary education (or the second
stage of basic education) - ISCED 3 upper secondary education
- ISCED 4 post-secondary non-tertiary education
- ISCED 5 first stage of tertiary education
- ISCED 6 second stage of tertiary education
(advanced research qualifications) -
Source SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA regional report
UNESCO Institute for Statistics
4Gross Tertiary School Enrollment 1996-99
- Tansania, Rwanda, Uganda, Ethiopia, Afghanistan
1-3 - Sri Lanka, Cameroon, Nigeria, Togo, Bangladesh
4-5 - China 7
- Mexiko 18
- Romania 22
- Poland 24
- Kazahstan 26
- Philippines 28
- Chile 34
- Germany 46
- France, Spain 56
- USA 77
Source Earth Trends (Based on UNESCO Statistics)
5Foreign students in higher education in seleted
countries
6Total gratuated per year
- Germany, Poland ca. 200.000
- South Africa 103.000
- Uganda 10.200
- Ethiopia 8.500
- Tansania 3.900
- Togo 4.450
- Liberia 1.200
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8Effects in countries of destination
- filling of lacking human resources
- receiving of highly skilled workers without
having costs of education - wages gains for companies
9Effects in countries of origin
- loss of innovative and educated community members
- loss of public investments of education
- (if at public extence)
- slower or even declining economic growth (in some
countries)
10Effects in countries of origin benefits of return
- workers return with knowledge that is more
advanced, or with better skills than they would
have acquired at home - the knowledge and skills acquired abroad are
relevant to the needs of the home country
economy
11Effects in countries of origin
- remittances
- creation of jobs and spur development in the
- transfer of technologies
- more dynamic in origin economies after return of
skilled workers - benefits when workers return with enhanced skills
and contacts in the international business
community - decrease of un- and under-employment
12Dealing with the brain drain
- better regulate the recruitment of skills that
are rare and needed in these countries - create incentives to promote return migration
- maximize the development contribution of migrant
communities, including via remittances - brain drain tax
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