>Are they abandoning their dreams—and does that matter?
It definitely matters, ask any developing nation about the brain drain and you know the reasons why individuals do it, it's a net gain for them but a loss for their nation. Now take all those reasoning and apply to the brain drain within disciplines and domains. All disciplines and domains are important and need significant contribution to continuously innovate.
Even at an individual scale people should do what they like/or are naturally good at, only then they will be able to do great work.
I'm guessing what you hit on is exactly why UK and US hit peak (economic, but I believe also structural) complexity in the 1960s: the beginning of "tech", "VCs", &c
"Dreams"- no one who works at the Economist expects dreamers to participate in the world with the same respect and privilege level that higher levels of money brings. Why is this even a story?
suryajena|1 year ago
It definitely matters, ask any developing nation about the brain drain and you know the reasons why individuals do it, it's a net gain for them but a loss for their nation. Now take all those reasoning and apply to the brain drain within disciplines and domains. All disciplines and domains are important and need significant contribution to continuously innovate.
Even at an individual scale people should do what they like/or are naturally good at, only then they will be able to do great work.
gsf_emergency|1 year ago
quantified|1 year ago
gjvc|1 year ago