Magazine suggests brain drain prevention via immigration barriers
The Economist has published analysis suggesting that visa restrictions hurting individual Indians might paradoxically benefit India as a nation, which is the kind of counterintuitive economic argument that makes perfect sense on paper and absolutely none in reality. The logic goes: if talented Indians can’t leave, they’ll stay and build India instead. This assumes people denied opportunities abroad will cheerfully redirect their ambitions domestically rather than, say, becoming bitter about artificial limitations on their careers.
The article examines how tighter US and UK immigration policies affect Indian professionals, particularly in tech and medicine. Traditionally, India’s best and brightest would study abroad, work abroad, and maybe return decades later if at all. This “brain drain” has long worried Indian policymakers who invest in education only to see graduates contribute to other economies. But what if, The Economist muses, keeping talent home by making leaving harder actually forces development India couldn’t achieve otherwise?
It’s an interesting thought experiment that treats humans like economic widgets rather than people with agency and aspirations. Yes, preventing emigration means more talent stays in India. It also means more talented people feeling trapped, resentful, and potentially underutilized in an economy that hasn’t created enough opportunities matching their skills. The Economist’s analysis reads like someone justifying a breakup by noting all the money you’ll save not going on dates.
The piece notes that India’s startup ecosystem has exploded partly because returned NRIs brought back expertise and capital. Fair point. It also acknowledges that many startups were founded by people who chose to return, not people forced to stay. There’s a meaningful difference between building India because you want to and building India because you can’t leave. One creates entrepreneurial energy; the other creates exit strategies.
Visa restrictions do force companies to invest more in local talent development. If you can’t import workers easily, you train domestic ones. This is genuinely positive for skill building and employment. It’s also a second-best solutionthe first-best being open borders where talent flows freely and countries compete to attract and retain the best people. But since we don’t live in that world, constrained mobility does create domestic opportunities.
The Economist’s argument essentially suggests that India benefits from other countries’ xenophobia, which is true in a twisted way. American immigration restrictions, driven by protectionism and political pandering, accidentally help India by keeping talent home. But celebrating this is like being happy your ex got fattechnically you win by default, but it’s a weird thing to cheer for.
The article treats brain drain purely as economics, ignoring that people emigrate for reasons beyond money. Political freedom, meritocracy, infrastructure quality, pollution levels, social attitudesthese factors push Indians abroad as much as salary differences do. Visa restrictions don’t address why people want to leave; they just make leaving harder. The result isn’t necessarily people happily building India; it’s often people stuck in India while dreaming of elsewhere.
There’s a grim utilitarianism to arguing that restrictions help nations even while hurting individuals. It’s mathematically correct and morally questionableyes, India might develop faster with talent trapped inside, but at the cost of millions of individual dreams deferred or denied. The Economist would never apply this logic to itselfsuggesting British journalists be banned from working abroad for Britain’s benefitbecause that would be obviously absurd.
The piece concludes that visa restrictions might accelerate India’s development despite harming individual Indians, which is technically possible and humanly depressing. It’s the economic policy equivalent of “things will get worse before they get better,” except applied to people’s entire careers and life trajectories. Maybe India does benefit from closed borders elsewhere. That doesn’t make it a good thing; it just makes it a thing.
SOURCE: https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2025/11/20/visa-restrictions-are-bad-for-indians-but-maybe-not-for-india
SOURCE: Bohiney.com (https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2025/11/20/visa-restrictions-are-bad-for-indians-but-maybe-not-for-india)
