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 benefited 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).
Keywords: immigration, education, reverse migration, management,
science, engineering, U.S. competitiveness
Working Paper Series
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