It’s a global issue with a catchy name, but an impact that is all too real for developing countries. “Brain drain” is the concept of highly skilled or educated people moving from one country to another in search of opportunity.
Global Brain Drain Issue
It's a global issue with a catchy name, but an impact that is all too real for developing countries. "Brain drain" is the concept of highly skilled or educated people moving from one country to another in search of opportunity.In Puerto Rico, residents are leaving the island at a near record rate. The mass exodus seen recently is the worst since almost half a million people left in the 1950s. Puerto’s Rico’s population has dropped by nearly ten percent since 20-09. A large proportion of those people are highly educated and they’re leaving for better opportunities elsewhere. CCTV’s Nitza Soledad Perez reports from San Juan.
Follow Nitza Soledad Perez on Twitter @NitzaSoledad
Puerto Ricans fleeing for oppotunities
In Puerto Rico, residents are leaving the island at a near record rate. The mass exodus seen recently is the worst since almost half a million people left in the 1950s. Puerto's Rico's population has dropped by nearly ten percent since 20-09. A large proportion of those people are highly educated and they're leaving for better opportunities elsewhere. CCTV's Nitza Soledad Perez reports from San Juan.The brain drain issue is not just impacting places in the Americas and Africa– but also Asia. In China, for example, experts are warning that the country’s talent pool is slowly fading as millions leave the mainland. Guan Yang has the story from the capital of Liaoning Province.
China is One of the Most-Affected
he brain drain issue is not just impacting places in the Americas and Africa-- but also Asia. In China, for example, experts are warning that the country's talent pool is slowly fading as millions leave the mainland. Guan Yang has the story from the capital of Liaoning Province.Peru is currently experiencing a brain drain: a common phenomenon in developing countries when educated people find better opportunities abroad. Top scientists have left because of decades of underfunding in science and technology research. CCTV’s Dan Collyns investigates how Peru’s government is trying to reverse this.
Follow Dan Collyns on Twitter @CCTV_dancollyns