Latin America: brain drain largest for Argentina Ricardo Sametband
10 May 2005
Source: SciDev.Net
[BUENOS AIRES] Argentina has the highest percentage of scientists emigrating from Latin
America to the United States, according to a study by the Economy Commission for Latin
America and the Caribbean (Cepal).
Andrés Solimano, an economist at Cepal, told a meeting of the Foreign Knowledge
Networks for Employment and Development last month (27 April) that for every thousand
Argentineans who emigrate to the United States, 191 are qualified professionals,
scientists or technicians
In Chile the number drops to 156, in Peru to 100, and in Mexico to 26.
"This is part of a bigger study we are conducting at the Cepal, about
international mobility of talents. We want to study the movement of qualified people
around the globe, be they scientists, technicians, corporate executives, or artists,"
Solimano told SciDev.Net.
He added that Latin American countries spend a lot of money training scientists, but
these end up leaving because of a lack of funding, jobs,
or government interest in research. Their countries of origin are not seeing the benefits
from their investment, he said.
According to Solimano, science policymakers need to put this issue on their agendas.
This would help indigenous researchers in foreign countries link up with other scientists
in their homeland, or even encourage them to come home.
"All countries have emigration; the key is to understand the relation between
highly skilled labour and nationality. The number of science graduates continues to grow
in [Latin America], but research budgets can't cope with this," says Lucas Luchilo, a
researcher at the Centro Redes, a public institution specialising in science and
technology development in Latin America.
Two years ago, the Secretary of Technology, Science and Innovation in Argentina set up
Programa Raíces (Roots Program), a program to reach out to Argentinean researchers
working around the globe. The Argentinean Student and Graduates in the United States Center,
a website with chapters in Miami, Dallas and New York, has started the Argentinean
Diaspora Project with the same purpose.
Read more about brain drain in SciDev.Net's brain
drain dossier. |