The International Mobility of Talent
Types, Causes, and Development Impact
Solimano, Andrés Regional Advisor, United Nations Economic Commission for Latin American and the Caribbean (UN-ECLAC)
Print publication date: 2008 (this edition)
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: May 2008
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-953260-5







doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199532605.003.0005

AnnaLee Saxenian
Abstract: By 2000, over one-third of Silicon Valley's high-skilled workers were foreign-born, and overwhelmingly from Asia. These US-educated engineers are transforming developmental opportunities for formerly peripheral regions as they build professional and business connections to their home countries. In a process more akin to ‘brain circulation’ than ‘brain drain’, these engineers and entrepreneurs, aided by the lowered transaction costs associated with digitization, are transferring technical and institutional know-how between distant regional economies faster and more flexibly than most large corporations. This chapter examines how Chinese and Indian-born engineers are contributing to highly localized processes of entrepreneurial experimentation in their home countries, while maintaining close ties to the technology and markets in Silicon Valley.

Keywords: entrepreneurship, knowledge economy, start-ups, information technology, venture capital, China, India, USA, Silicon Valley,

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Part I Analytical Perspectives
Part II Case Studies: Entrepreneurs, Scientists, Students, Health Professionals, and Cultural Workers
Part III Additional Topics