Creative-Class Brain Drain
Other countries are luring our best and brightest
September / October 2004
Richard Florida Washington Monthly
Better than any other country in recent years, America has
developed new technologies and ideas that spawn new industries and
modernize old ones, from the Internet to big-box stores to
innovative product designs. We came up with these new technologies
and ideas largely because we were able to energize and attract the
best and the brightest, not just from our country but also from
around the world. Talented, educated immigrants and smart,
ambitious young Americans congregated, during the 1980s and 1990s,
in and around a dozen U.S. city-regions. These areas became
hothouses of innovation, the modern-day equivalents of Renaissance
city-states, where scientists, artists, designers, engineers,
financiers, marketers, and sundry entrepreneurs fed off each
other's knowledge, energy, and capital to make new products, new
services, and whole new industries.
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But cities from Sydney to Brussels to Dublin to Vancouver are
fast becoming creative-class centers to rival Boston, Seattle, and
Austin. They're doing it through a variety of means -- from
government-subsidized labs to partnerships between top local
universities and industry. Most of all, they're luring foreign
creative talent, including our own. The result is that the sort of
high-end, high-margin creative industries that used to be the
United States' province and a crucial source of our prosperity have
begun to move overseas. The most advanced cell phones are being
made in Salo, Finland, not Chicago. The world's leading airplanes
are being designed and built in Toulouse and Hamburg, not
Seattle.
As other nations become more attractive to mobile immigrant
talent, America is becoming less so. A recent study by the National
Science Board found that the U.S. government issued 74,000 visas
for immigrants to work in science and technology in 2002, down from
166,000 in 2001 -- an astonishing drop of 55 percent. This is
matched by similar, though smaller-scale, declines in other
categories of talented immigrants, from finance experts to
entertainers. Part of this contraction is derived from what we hope
are short-term security concerns, as federal agencies have
restricted visas from certain countries since September 11. More
disturbingly, we find indications that fewer educated foreigners
are choosing to come to the United States. For instance, most of
the decline in science and technology immigrants in the National
Science Board study was due to a drop in applications.
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