Losing the World's Best and Brightest: America's New Immigrant Entrepreneurs, Part V

V. Wadhwa, A. Saxenian, Richard B. Freeman, A. Salkever
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引用次数: 48

Abstract

Foreign national students have come to the United States to study in increasing numbers and participated in some of the most advanced academic research efforts to date, lending enormous brainpower to the development of technological and scientific innovations that benefitted America. The students were drawn to the United States by the country's highly vaunted academic research institutions and enormous budgets for funding basic and applied research. Upon completion of their studies, significant numbers of foreign students have traditionally chosen to remain in the U.S. to work full-time or pursue post-doctoral work. More recently, as the economies of the developing world have grown rapidly and Western economies have grown less quickly, anecdotal evidence has begun to suggest that fewer foreign national students wish to stay in the U.S. after graduation. Reports in the popular press, and elsewhere have suggested that many of these students now believe that greater opportunities exist elsewhere in the world. To date, there has been very little empirical research, aside from the NSF surveys, into the post-graduate intentions of foreign nationals, and the key factors driving their decisions to seek to stay in the U.S. or to move abroad. This paper attempts to fill some of this void. This paper is based on an Facebook survey of 1,224 foreign nationals who are currently studying in institutions of higher learning in the United States or who had graduated by the end of the 2008 academic school year. We found that foreign national students in our sample are planning to leave the U.S. after graduation in numbers that appear to be higher than the historical norm as measured in STEM disciplines. A significant percentage of these students also say they intend to open businesses in the future. This expressed intention is prevalent among Indian and Chinese nationals currently studying in the U.S. This would appear to be a marked contrast to the recent past, when Chinese and Indian degree holders were very likely to stay in the U.S. and continue working or in a research capacity (even more so in the PhD ranks).
失去世界上最优秀和最聪明的人:美国的新移民企业家,第五部分
越来越多的外国学生来美国学习,并参与一些迄今为止最先进的学术研究工作,为技术和科学创新的发展提供了巨大的智力,使美国受益。这些学生被美国引以为傲的学术研究机构和为基础研究和应用研究提供资金的巨额预算吸引到美国。在完成学业后,相当数量的外国学生传统上选择留在美国全职工作或从事博士后工作。最近,随着发展中国家经济的快速增长和西方经济的缓慢增长,坊间证据开始表明,毕业后希望留在美国的外国学生越来越少。大众媒体和其他地方的报道表明,这些学生中的许多人现在相信,世界上其他地方有更大的机会。迄今为止,除了美国国家科学基金会的调查外,很少有实证研究涉及外国人的研究生意向,以及促使他们决定留在美国或移居国外的关键因素。本文试图填补这一空白。本文基于Facebook对1224名目前在美国高等院校学习或2008学年末毕业的外国人的调查。我们发现,在我们的样本中,计划毕业后离开美国的外国学生人数似乎高于STEM学科的历史常态。这些学生中有相当大比例的人还表示,他们打算在未来创业。这种表达的意图在目前在美国学习的印度和中国公民中很普遍。这似乎与最近的情况形成了鲜明对比,当时中国和印度的学位持有者很可能留在美国继续工作或从事研究工作(在博士队伍中更是如此)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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