Ukraine has another crisis facing it and it is one which is not, so far being mentioned, as far as I can determine in any of the various (and many) media outlets and it is a crisis, which, I suggest, is no less serious than the one's facing it right now. The only difference being that this is a crisis just waiting in the wings, somewhere further up the track: for the train to hit the buffers sometime within say the next five to ten years. And, when it does eventually hit - it is going to hit those...
Described as movement of people to foreign countries for education, advanced training and acquiring new skills, intellectual migration is becoming a huge problem for Russia. The process can be both short- and long-term, up to change of citizenship, and engulfs students, young specialists and many others willing to become more knowledgeable and practiced. Globalization helps a lot, only increasing the numbers of Russian runaways who may have made the backbone of national renovation force and Russia’s...
... Director of the Russian International Affairs Council (RIAC), predicts that in the near future the outflow of talented and creative people might be the case because of the political situation in the country and economic challenges.
“Historically, brain drain is accompanied by capital outflow from a country,” he said. “And in this situation there will be two major factors that fuel this trend. If Russia’s economy has stagnated, with Europe and the U.S. gradually getting out of ...
... promote the resettlement of compatriots in the homeland, then at least in raising their awareness to the technological modernization of the country, even though it is their former country.
Leave to go back? The "brain gain" policy against "brain drain"
According to official statisticsfor China, after 1978, the new leadership, which came to power after Mao Zedong, allowed young people leave to study abroad, and the total number of Chinese citizens that received diploma education, training ...