The purpose of the paper is first to quantify the extent of high
skilled migration from India and then to distil out two of its economic
implications to her home economy. First the high skilled migration has
resulted in larger amount of remittances: India is now the largest
remittance receiving country in the world. Although during the period
up to the mid 1990s, the source of this remittances were largely the
result of low skilled migration to the middle east, since that period
nearly half of the remittances are emanating from the US alone and it is
not difficult to argue that this trend in the shift in source is very much
tied to high skilled migration. The availability of these remittances has
helped the country to reduce its deficits in the current account of its
Balance of Payments even if these remittances have not always found
expression in productive investments in the home economy. Further the
increased consumption smoothening that these remittances have
contributed to have had a positive effect in spurring and maintaining
the high growth performance of her services sector. The second
implication is that it has had a deleterious consequence on the supply of
high skilled personnel especially for R&D: in fact India has one of the
lowest densities of scientists and engineers engaged in R&D. Although
there are quantitative evidences (based on an analysis of both input and
output indicators of innovation) to show that India has become
significantly more innovative in the period since 1991, her ability to
sustain and improve this performance crucially depend on the
availability of highly skilled manpower of certain acceptable quality.
Although a small number of such manpower is turned out by the higher
education system, they do not find an expression in the core human
resource on science and technology and part of this “lack of expression”
may be attributed to the increased high skilled migration.
Keywords: India, high skilled, brain drain, brain circulation, remittances,
science and engineering work force JEL Codes: F22;F24;O15;O38
History
Publisher
Centre for Development Studies
Citation
Mani, Sunil (2009) High skilled migration from India : an analysis of its economic implications. CDS working papers, no.416. Trivandrum: CDS.