Think
of you going through all the pains
of raising your family amidst all
kind of imaginable hardship, with
out a grain of help from whosoever.
and at old age, time for you to reap
the benefit of your children,
someone totally alien to your family
got in the way. Instead of your
children doing exactly what they are
supposed to do, they turned their
focus on some strange person that
had nothing to do with their upkeep.
What would be your response if you
were the parent of such siblings?
This analogy illustrates what the
world's poorer countries, mostly
African countries, go through. The
phenomenon is called "Brain drain".
An eluding, economically lethal
phenomenon, brain drain continues to
besiege and impede the intermittent
progress of the developing world,
which is losing skilled labor
because there are "better paid jobs"
in the developed world. In recent
years, this has affected poorer
countries more so, as some rich
countries entice workers away, and
workers look to escape desolate
circumstances in their poor home
countries.
Accordingly, it started in early
60s, when British scientists and
intellectuals immigrated to the
United States for a better working
climate. In recent years, however,
the problem of brain drain has been
acute for poorer countries like the
Gambia, which lose workers to
wealthier countries like Britain.
Almost ironically, England is now a
country where many such workers end
up. It can be understandable that
people in poorer countries will want
to get away from poverty and
corruption, and if they can afford
to do so, why should they be denied
the ability to try? However, we are
obliged to highlight the
repercussion of such a shape of
exodus on the future of poorer
countries.
After all individual success can
never guarantee a nation's progress.
A lot of money, time and effort have
are invested on training
professionals. So, to lose these
assets, over night, to some
unfocused urge for personal
advancement, is the most outrageous
thing that can happen to nations
that are barely struggling for
survival.
The problem has been illustrious in
the healthcare sector in particular,
although not limited to it, because
the loss of healthcare professionals
in poorer countries leaves already
struggling healthcare systems in an
even more desperate state. And even
more important is that healthcare is
the most expensive sector in terms
of training. A World Health
Organization (WHO) report notes that
there is a global shortage of 4.3
million doctors, midwives, nurses,
and support workers. That very same
report further went onto say that
these shortfalls often coexist in
countries with large numbers of
unemployed health professionals.
Poverty, imperfect private labor
markets, lack of public funds,
bureaucratic red tape and political
interference, among others, produce
this paradox of shortages in the
midst of underutilized talent. But
this problem also illustrates a lack
of patriotism on the part of the
deserting professionals.
If the pioneers of this so-called
developed world had behaved
themselves the same greedy way as
our professionals are doing, they
couldn't have been where they are
today. Therefore, if we must change
the tide for our prospective
generations, it is high time we
changed our attitude. If we are to
excel in whatever we do we must
think of doing them for those that
come after us, and not for us.