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Brain Drain And Brain Gain In Africa
- By Ravinder Rena
- Published 04/12/2008
- Globalisation
- Unrated
The benefits
of globalisation flowed primarily to the developed world and its principal
trading partners, among them
One central
question that has caused a lot of controversy has been whether brain drain has
positive or negative impact on developing economies.
Some authors
hold that brain drain represents a major development constraint both in terms of
development opportunities and lost investment and that it drains sending areas
of their human capital that took enormous resources to nurture and produce. The
country with outflow of emigrants, it is argued, loses critical human capital in
which it has invested resources through education and specialized training and
for which it is not compensated by the recipient country.
The views aired by proponents of the divergent school of thought are that, the country of origin suffers a net loss because it funds the education and training of professionals who, precisely at the moment they start producing, decide to emigrate. Conversely, the receiving country obtains qualified workers without having to bear the costs of training them, and therefore makes a net gain. Africa’s education budget becomes nothing but a supplement to the education budgets for the West. For instance, the annual budget of some of the universities in America is more than that of the annual budget of big countries (let alone small countries) in Africa. Hence, giving developmental assistance to the wealthier western nations, which makes the rich nations richer and the poor nations poorer?
There is a
general belief that brain drain tends to pull the ‘best and the brightest from
their home countries, the very people most equipped to help improve living
conditions at home. This means a slow death for
Africa.
The
proponents of the convergence school of thought look at brain drain from a
functionalist perspective. They argue that the human capital investment made in
the high-level migrants is partly recovered through remittances. Although not
many economy-wide studies have been conducted on the effects of migrant
remittances on African countries, it is often emphasized that while emigration
countries lose manpower and particularly the “best and brightest”, they also get
something in return.
The economic
impact of remittances has been considered beneficial at both the micro and macro
levels. The value of migrant remittances can significantly exceed that of
national export earnings for instance, Eritrea receives about 40 % of its GDP
through remittances, whereas exports contribute about 4% to the GDP. Available
estimates indicate that there has been rapid growth in the volume of global
remittances in recent decades, from less than US$2 billion in 1970 to US$70
billion in 1995, surpassing official development
assistance.
Some
economists tout remittances as the developing world’s most reliable and broadly
based source of financing, making it effectively a new form of foreign aid. A
report states that a beneficial aspect of the brain drain, if properly managed,
is that it enables emigrants to send a part of their earnings home in the form
of remittances, thus providing the home country with a source of valuable
foreign currency. It has also been observed that the remittances can have a
multiplier effect on the economy as a whole.
Those who argue against the issue of remittances often emphasize their unproductive nature. They say, not only are remittances insufficient to compensate for human capital losses, they, increase dependency, contribute to political instability, engender economic distortions, and hinder development because they are unpredictable and undependable and encourage the consumption of goods with high import content. The remittances fail to enhance development because they are not spent on investment goods but mostly spent on unproductive purposes – housing, land purchase, transport, repayment of debt, or to a smaller degree wasted on conspicuous consumption, or simply saved as insurance and old age pension funds.
It is to
note that there is a need to eliminate poverty in Africa, and not merely
reducing it by sending money to relatives.
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