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”.
"In general, I wish there was more nuance around the brain gain hypothesis. I would speculate it has such immediate acceptance because it resolves our conflicting commitments as cosmopolitans: we want people to be able to pursue a better life, we want high-income countries to have more open immigration policy, and we want low-income countries to grow faster."
This describes a bit of what's going on in my head. I often feel guilty around the lack of opportunities for my colleagues here, and the slow economic growth. If the brain gain hypothesis is true, its a bit of a get-out-of-jail-free card for my conscience so I really, really want to believe it.