And then there is the question of how the NHS in Scotland is contributing to the brain drain of medical staff from Malawi and elsewhere. |
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This has caused many scientists to emigrate, and the brain drain has helped maintain relations with leading scientific institutions. |
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It's due to a gap in leadership and talent at many agencies, perhaps an outgrowth of a brain drain caused by the last recession. |
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Of course, he is still on African soil, which is a better situation than his joining the brain drain. |
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The problems, the political system, the brain drain and the heavy competition from more talent rich competitors will tell the real story. |
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In the meantime capital flight, the exodus of businessmen and the brain drain will be downplayed by the Government. |
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The brain drain to the oil-rich Arab countries and to the Western world became a flood. |
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A brain drain blighted the Labour governments of the 1970s, as high earners were driven abroad by penal income-tax rates. |
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He was trying to set up his own institute, and threatening to join the brain drain to America if he didn't get the money. |
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Its once generous welfare state now looks completely unaffordable and Germany is now suffering a brain drain of scientists. |
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But this is something that the County Development Officer should be dealing with, using the influence and the political connections to stop the brain drain from the county. |
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As a result, Russia is suffering capital flight and brain drain, and is growing weaker. |
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India is rising and shining and we want to create opportunities here to make sure that there is no brain drain. |
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However, when it comes to the brain drain, it's nowhere near a mass exodus. |
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Increasing the number of training places should reduce the impact of the brain drain. |
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At the same time, it is important to avoid creating a scientific brain drain. |
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The brain drain phenomenon has become familiar across many branches of the economy. |
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A successful recruitment policy will inevitably lead to a brain drain which could undermine the development process in sending countries. |
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The WCHE recommendations on the brain drain are very similar to those of the Delors Report and the World Conference on Science. |
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However, the Blue Card scheme lacks an adequate safety net to safeguard against the risk of brain drain. |
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Therefore, researchers have to be trained, and the problem of brain drain to the north has to be resolved. |
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Maybe the cleric can rub his own magic lamp, and ask it to explain the concept known as brain drain. |
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In fact, turnaround experts will tell you that the brain drain typically begins long before the Chapter 11 filing. |
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It should be allowing banks to operate here, thus stopping the city's brain drain to Amman and Dubai. |
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Lois Labrianidis, an economic geographer at the University of Macedonia, says that Greece is now facing a brain drain. |
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And he believes that the U.S. government is causing a brain drain by pushing out highly educated citizens such as Thom. |
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It had suffered a sizeable brain drain, since over a third of its workforce was fired by Chavez for dereliction of duty. |
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After more than a decade without a real educational budget increase, the U.K. was falling victim to the same brain drain that we face in Australia. |
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If you are thinking of joining the brain drain and hopping the ditch, then these changes will directly influence the wages and conditions you get over there. |
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No one was surprised when he joined the brain drain to take up a research fellowship at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota with Dr Earl Wood, a leading heart physiologist. |
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The situation is hardly helped by the brain drain, in which Northern towns suffer an exodus of the most educated and skilled who are sucked away to London. |
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But agonised platitudes spoken in Brussels need to be transformed into programmes for encouraging research if the brain drain is ever to be plugged. |
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His document looks at the country's declining birth rate and the continuing brain drain and presents an apocalyptic vision of the future in Scotland. |
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That could help pay for better wages and facilities for the brightest university staff and limit the brain drain to better funded English institutions. |
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Meanwhile, the brain drain was being tackled by recognition and reward schemes for contract researchers at the early stages of their careers, she said. |
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Of course, the brain drain phenomena also affects India and China, but to a lesser extent. |
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The programme is not, after all, intended to crank up the brain drain. |
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Having a detailed description of the daily tasks performed by the person should help guard against a brain drain or knowledge void that might otherwise occur. |
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All Canadians would suffer as a result of the greatly increased brain drain that would then ensue. |
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He plans to return to South Africa to pursue medical studies and help reverse the brain drain. |
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Insecurities about English ability de-motivate many promising students of science, creating more of a brain drain than migration overseas. |
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It's one of the highest recipients of so-called Third World brain drain in the world. |
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The key element, particularly relevant in Poland, is both to counteract the existing brain drain and create a positive brain gain impact. |
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The papers focus, among other topics, on the infamous brain drain, sweat shop labor, wage levels, and changes in production processes. |
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In partnership with the Science Sector, it held an international meeting on genetically modified organisms and the brain drain, at the Scientific Centre of the Polish Academy of Sciences, in September 2003 in Paris. |
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I can mention a few other factors, such as servicing the debt, the protectionist policies of certain trade partners, and the brain drain of professionals trained at great expense to our country. |
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Modi said that India has made the transformation from a country worried about its brain drain to a country that thinks of brain gain. |
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The crisis of the 1990s led to the drastic reduction of the state support for science and a brain drain migration from Russia. |
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The exodus of Huguenots from France created a brain drain, as many Huguenots had occupied important places in society. |
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Like many third world countries, we are experiencing brain drain. |
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Many family-owned businesses pay a lot of attention to planning around the retirement of key executives or members of the management team, fearing that when these folks leave, the business will suffer a brain drain. |
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In that respect, may I ask the Council how to avoid the issue of brain drain, or cherry-picking of the best workers not just from developing countries but from emerging economies as well? |
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What will come of commitments to stem the brain drain when education faculties in key sectors and disciplines in industrialized countries are keen to hire the best researchers in a given field? |
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The National Assembly of Scientists, an organization representing senior NIH researchers, has published a statement warning that the rules might produce a brain drain. |
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While these immigrations have greatly contributed to globalization, they have also precipitated trends like brain drain and problems with repatriation. |
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During the 1990s and 2000s, the development of research was hampered by several factors, including corruption, low funding and a considerable brain drain. |
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The state university system offered programs that were popular with students but for which there were few job openings in the state, helping North Dakota's brain drain along. |
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However, the statistics which purport to show a brain drain are disputed and also do not account for repatriation and expiry of foreign work contracts. |
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