I'm a research fellow at Open Philanthropy on the global health and well-being cause prioritization; I've just launched a Substack. Here's the first post, on brain drain from developing countries.
What becomes of a country where all the educated people leave?
In the seven years between 2011 and 2018, some 10% of doctors in Bhutan left the country for good. By 2017, 88% of Nigerian doctors were considering moving abroad. In the last decade, the number of doctors seeking to leave Turkey has increased a terrifying 70-fold (with no end in sight). What does the medical sector in these countries even look like in ten years?
Policymakers are certainly concerned about this; in 2010, the speaker of Parliament in Lebanon said brain drain was “the biggest problem we face”.
I think this is a bit of a roundabout argument. From the Philippines study:
So they are finding exactly what you suggest, that people switch to the sector from other sectors, but they also find that if people hadn't moved, they would have been less likely to graduate college, period. So if you see increases in the overall stock of college workers as an overall positive effect, the program did have an overall positive effect.
But in general, I don't even think you need to appeal to that kind of reasoning, because brain drain is usually in jobs that are among the most valuable possible jobs for the country. (This is likely because those jobs are both the jobs that rich countries want to import, and also because they must be well-paid for the people to have the means to emigrate.) Medical workers are extremely valuable, so are engineers. It seems a little contrived to imagine that the sectors that lost out were comparably socially valuable.