楼主: eros_zz
6098 41

[财经英语角区] 20110529 Follow Me 19 [推广有奖]

荣誉版主

查看头衔双击这里

已卖:765份资源

泰斗

34%

还不是VIP/贵宾

-

TA的文库  其他...

投资人

投资人价值发现

【投资人】深度研究

威望
15
论坛币
2187198 个
通用积分
44473.6018
学术水平
2363 点
热心指数
2621 点
信用等级
2249 点
经验
232874 点
帖子
4932
精华
112
在线时间
10126 小时
注册时间
2008-8-22
最后登录
2025-2-16

一级伯乐勋章 初级热心勋章 初级信用勋章 中级学术勋章 初级学术勋章 中级热心勋章 中级信用勋章 高级学术勋章 高级热心勋章 高级信用勋章 特级热心勋章 特级学术勋章 特级信用勋章

楼主
eros_zz 学生认证  发表于 2011-5-28 19:30:34 |AI写论文

+2 论坛币
k人 参与回答

经管之家送您一份

应届毕业生专属福利!

求职就业群
赵安豆老师微信:zhaoandou666

经管之家联合CDA

送您一个全额奖学金名额~ !

感谢您参与论坛问题回答

经管之家送您两个论坛币!

+2 论坛币
六月即将迎来 Follow Me  的第一次升级 敬请期待   


Economics focus
Drain or gain?
Poor countries can end up benefiting when their brightest citizens emigrate May 26th 2011 | from the print edition


WHEN people in rich countries worry about migration, they tend to think of low-paid incomers who compete for jobs as construction workers, dishwashers or farmhands. When people in developing countries worry about migration, they are usually concerned at the prospect of their best and brightest decamping to Silicon Valley or to hospitals and universities in the developed world. These are the kind of workers that countries like Britain, Canada and Australia try to attract by using immigration rules that privilege college graduates.
Lots of studies have found that well-educated people from developing countries are particularly likely to emigrate. By some estimates, two-thirds of highly educated Cape Verdeans live outside the country. A big survey of Indian households carried out in 2004 asked about family members who had moved abroad. It found that nearly 40% of emigrants had more than a high-school education, compared with around 3.3% of all Indians over the age of 25. This “brain drain” has long bothered policymakers in poor countries. They fear that it hurts their economies, depriving them of much-needed skilled workers who could have taught at their universities, worked in their hospitals and come up with clever new products for their factories to make.

Many now take issue with this view (see article). Several economists reckon that the brain-drain hypothesis fails to account for the effects of remittances, for the beneficial effects of returning migrants, and for the possibility that being able to migrate to greener pastures induces people to get more education. Some argue that once these factors are taken into account, an exodus of highly skilled people could turn out to be a net benefit to the countries they leave. Recent studies of migration from countries as far apart as Ghana, Fiji, India and Romania have found support for this “brain gain” idea.


The most obvious way in which migrants repay their homelands is through remittances. Workers from developing countries remitted a total of $325 billion in 2010, according to the World Bank. In Lebanon, Lesotho, Nepal, Tajikistan and a few other places, remittances are more than 20% of GDP. A skilled migrant may earn several multiples of what his income would have been had he stayed at home. A study of Romanian migrants to America found that the average emigrant earned almost $12,000 a year more in America than he would have done in his native land, a huge premium for someone from a country where income per person is around $7,500 (at market exchange rates).

It is true that many skilled migrants have been educated and trained partly at the expense of their (often cash-strapped) governments. Some argue that poor countries should therefore rethink how much they spend on higher education. Indians, for example, often debate whether their government should continue to subsidise the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs), its elite engineering schools, when large numbers of IIT graduates end up in Silicon Valley or on Wall Street. But a new study of remittances sent home by Ghanaian migrants suggests that on average they transfer enough over their working lives to cover the amount spent on educating them several times over. The study finds that once remittances are taken into account, the cost of education would have to be 5.6 times the official figure to make it a losing proposition for Ghana.

There are more subtle ways in which the departure of some skilled people may aid poorer countries. Some emigrants would have been jobless had they stayed. Studies have found that unemployment rates among young people with college degrees in countries like Morocco and Tunisia are several multiples of those among the poorly educated, perhaps because graduates are more demanding. Migration may lead to a more productive pairing of people’s skills and jobs. Some of the benefits of this improved match then flow back to the migrant’s home country, most directly via remittances.

The possibility of emigration may even have beneficial effects on those who choose to stay, by giving people in poor countries an incentive to invest in education. A study of Cape Verdeans finds that an increase of ten percentage points in young people’s perceived probability of emigrating raises the probability of their completing secondary school by around eight points. Another study looks at Fiji. A series of coups beginning in 1987 was seen by Fijians of Indian origin as permanently harming their prospects in the country by limiting their share of government jobs and political power. This set off a wave of emigration. Yet young Indians in Fiji became more likely to go to university even as the outlook at home dimmed, in part because Australia, Canada and New Zealand, three of the top destinations for Fijians, put more emphasis on attracting skilled migrants. Since some of those who got more education ended up staying, the skill levels of the resident Fijian population soared.

Passport to riches
Migrants can also affect their home country directly. In a recent book about the Indian diaspora, Devesh Kapur of the University of Pennsylvania argues that Indians in Silicon Valley helped shape the regulatory structure for India’s home-grown venture-capital industry. He also argues that these people helped Indian software companies break into the American market by vouching for their quality. Finally, migrants may return home, often with skills that would have been hard to pick up had they never gone abroad. The study of Romanian migrants found that returnees earned an average of 12-14% more than similar people who had stayed at home. Letting educated people go where they want looks like the brainy option.



二维码

扫码加我 拉你入群

请注明:姓名-公司-职位

以便审核进群资格,未注明则拒绝

关键词:follow LOW Universities unemployment Construction 英语 followme 真经版

已有 2 人评分学术水平 热心指数 信用等级 收起 理由
EmmaUK + 1 + 1 + 1 很有毅力!
arthistory4 + 4 + 5 对论坛有贡献

总评分: 学术水平 + 5  热心指数 + 6  信用等级 + 1   查看全部评分

沙发
桉树熊 在职认证  发表于 2011-5-28 21:49:17
Follow 19 19
But in China, higher education is always a problem. We had paid 12 years to pass a test and enter the University. And it seems impossible for us to be expelled in an University. We learn a series of knowledge about Socialism when junior. While our enthusiasm gradually decrease we start our major lessons. And we copy papers and books in order to hand up our thesis. So many undergraduates wanna to take a lesson outside the motherland. What we want is not only elementary educations! What we need is ELITE EDUCATION which can cultivate elite who could compete with the PhD in America or Europe.
已有 2 人评分经验 论坛币 热心指数 收起 理由
天津宝贝儿 + 1 观点有启发
eros_zz + 20 + 20 鼓励积极发帖讨论

总评分: 经验 + 20  论坛币 + 20  热心指数 + 1   查看全部评分

藤椅
bengdi1986 发表于 2011-5-29 08:20:05
19,19
"brain gain" is a long strategy for every country.for developed countries, their people worries that lots of low-paid work-pursuiters affect their opportunities to acquire a job.fou developing countries ,however,they  have a fear that well-educated graduates who are brought by their own country make the contribution to developed country in order to gain more money or chances in turn.how to formulate measures to attract elite abroad to immigrate and to restrict national brain drain?it is a critical problem to work out.
已有 1 人评分经验 论坛币 收起 理由
eros_zz + 20 + 20 鼓励积极发帖讨论

总评分: 经验 + 20  论坛币 + 20   查看全部评分

板凳
Pution 发表于 2011-5-29 08:20:17
Thank you for sharing!
I'm not afraid to take a stand.Everybody come take my hand. I’m not alone.

报纸
Pution 发表于 2011-5-29 08:21:24
真惭愧,我没有楼主的坚持,只当要考试才抓紧·········
已有 1 人评分经验 收起 理由
eros_zz + 20 加油!

总评分: 经验 + 20   查看全部评分

I'm not afraid to take a stand.Everybody come take my hand. I’m not alone.

地板
旅途8694 发表于 2011-5-29 08:23:36
19,19
With the rapid growth of GDP and the higher degree of openness towards the rest of the world in China, however,  the brain drain is increasingly serious there.  There is no proof that deny the upsurge in Chinese emigration to Western countries,particularly the United States, Canada and Australia.  China became the biggest worldwide contributor of emigrants in 2007.  As the biggest contributor of emigrants,  China suffers the worst brain drain in the world, according to a new study that found seven out of every 10 students who enroll in an overseas university never return to live in their homeland.
已有 2 人评分经验 论坛币 学术水平 热心指数 收起 理由
天津宝贝儿 + 1 观点有启发
eros_zz + 40 + 40 + 1 + 1 我很赞同

总评分: 经验 + 40  论坛币 + 40  学术水平 + 1  热心指数 + 2   查看全部评分

只要相信自己所走的路,大步向前走就好,然后就那样成为一个能让别人带着笑容守望着的人。

7
muhouxiaotian 发表于 2011-5-29 08:57:59
4.4  继续继续
已有 1 人评分经验 收起 理由
eros_zz + 20 鼓励积极发帖讨论

总评分: 经验 + 20   查看全部评分

8
达濠仁 发表于 2011-5-29 09:02:07
19,19
So many people go abroad to further their education . I think they should come back to make contributions to their homeland .

I don't understand why an increasing number of people want to go abroad .
we all know developed countries have better education and chances , but not appropriate for everybody . And it's not a competitive power when so many have had experience of other country .
I think some people have been blind when they choose to go abroad , of course not all of them .
For me , practice is more important than education . The situation and systemin in developing countries are always different compared with developed countries .
已有 1 人评分经验 论坛币 热心指数 收起 理由
eros_zz + 20 + 20 + 1 鼓励积极发帖讨论

总评分: 经验 + 20  论坛币 + 20  热心指数 + 1   查看全部评分

It's better bo burn out than fade away .

9
lijunhua 发表于 2011-5-29 09:13:27
9
这些天忙论文开题,漏过了很多
已有 1 人评分经验 收起 理由
eros_zz + 20 加油!

总评分: 经验 + 20   查看全部评分

一切问题最终都是时间问题,一切烦恼其实都是自寻烦恼

10
chinalin2002 发表于 2011-5-29 09:20:39
12......12
High-skilled people in developing countries emigrating to rich countries is a serious problem, even though they remit a lot of money to their motherlands. As we know, it is the technology innovation that determemines whether developing countries catch up with developed countries, and high skilled people is the rescource of technology innovation. remitting money is just like a subsidiary, and  in most cases these subsidiaries are recieved by unskilled people (skill people's parents),  but the key problem of economic development is still not unsolved. That gives the human by the fish is not better than teaching him to fish.
已有 2 人评分经验 论坛币 热心指数 信用等级 收起 理由
天津宝贝儿 + 1 观点有启发
eros_zz + 20 + 20 + 1 鼓励积极发帖讨论

总评分: 经验 + 20  论坛币 + 20  热心指数 + 1  信用等级 + 1   查看全部评分

仁者不忧,知者不或,勇者不畏。

您需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 我要注册

本版微信群
jg-xs1
拉您进交流群
GMT+8, 2025-12-28 17:37