2015
DOI: 10.1080/14683857.2015.1050799
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Brain drain in Central and Eastern Europe: new insights on the role of public policy

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Cited by 14 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…The same findings also infer entrepreneurship education provision in Budapest may not be adequately matched with current economic traits, including those of digitalisation. The prevailing emphasis in the CEE region on traditional development of technically related human capital, as noted for example, by Földvári and van Leeuwen (2005) and by Jurajda and Terrell (2010), might also be derived from findings l and n. This is consistent with perspectives on substantial drainage of human capital from the CEE region to Western Europe since EU accession (Ienciu & Ienciu, 2015;Petersen & Puliga, 2017) to infer that a limited pool of talented employees remains in the CEE region. Hence competitiveness levels of locally-based talented individuals may rise in terms of locally-based employment.…”
Section: Entrepreneurial Ecosystem Development Is Hindered By Outmoded Means Of Human Capital Formationsupporting
confidence: 74%
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“…The same findings also infer entrepreneurship education provision in Budapest may not be adequately matched with current economic traits, including those of digitalisation. The prevailing emphasis in the CEE region on traditional development of technically related human capital, as noted for example, by Földvári and van Leeuwen (2005) and by Jurajda and Terrell (2010), might also be derived from findings l and n. This is consistent with perspectives on substantial drainage of human capital from the CEE region to Western Europe since EU accession (Ienciu & Ienciu, 2015;Petersen & Puliga, 2017) to infer that a limited pool of talented employees remains in the CEE region. Hence competitiveness levels of locally-based talented individuals may rise in terms of locally-based employment.…”
Section: Entrepreneurial Ecosystem Development Is Hindered By Outmoded Means Of Human Capital Formationsupporting
confidence: 74%
“…While a lack of managerially oriented human capital in the CEE region is well documented (i.e., Földvári & van Leeuwen, 2005;Jurajda & Terrell, 2010;Szerb et al, 2019), its availability is perhaps restricted by skilled labour outflows to Western European countries from new member states 2 since EU accession began in 2004. A loss of regional human capital (Ienciu & Ienciu, 2015;Kovac et al, 2018) may also lead to weak institutional status in terms of ecosystem development in specific locations. Moreover, CEE-based start-up firms may lack innovative potential in terms of impact on the economic performance of regions (Szerb et al, 2019) which is not perhaps unrelated to an overall lack of managerially oriented human capital.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is deeply rooted in the Vietnamese' mindset that foreign education is of much higher quality, thereby boosting individuals' employability and securing future earning power. Nga Ho et al (2018) finds that many children opt for overseas study, some of whom decide on permanent settlement in foreign developed countries due to career factors (salaries, job opportunities) and non-career factors (education, quality of life), causing a phenomenon called "brain drain effect" (Ho et al, 2018;Ienciu & Ienciu, 2015). There is a widely held belief that emigration and brain drain go hand in hand, negatively affecting the source country.…”
Section: Migration and Air Pollution And Problems (Urban Planning Brain Drain)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While the merits of internationalisation could be seen as self-explanatory in the context of the knowledge society, it is nevertheless worth noting that academic international cooperation is sometimes considered as a compounding factor of existing inequalities (Altbach and Knight 2007;Bilecen and Mol 2017;Norris 2020a). Brain drain, the one-way flow of highly skilled persons from developing to developed countries, is the most visible downside of internationalisation, and a frequent concern within the European Union and elsewhere (Ienciu and Ienciu 2015). In a recent study of global political science, Norris (2020a, 137-139) emphasises the growing category of "academic migrants", i.e.…”
Section: Introduction: the Quest For Internationalisation In Politica...mentioning
confidence: 99%