cartoon from the Economist.
Posted By Dr.HSU
Posted By Dr.HSU
The most important asset of a country is not its
natural resources but rather human resources. This is especially true in a
knowledge based economy, which of course will be the trend in future if not
already the trend in most of the western countries.
My daughter, who is in her final year medicine in
Auckland, told me that a team of Singapore recruitment officers have just
visited Auckland and talked to the Malaysian students there, offering job and
training prospect for the final year students once they graduate. My daughter
also told me that over the last few years, quite a lot of her Malaysian
seniors, after graduating from medical courses in NZ, have gone to Singapore to
work as house-officers and subsequently stayed back in Singapore for their
postgraduate training.
Similar teams are sent to Australia and UK for
recruiting Malaysians there to work in Singapore .
About a year ago, in one of the articles in Reuters,
this was reported:
Malaysia is counting on bright, ambitious people
like Tan Chye Ling for its future, to lead it away from manufacturing and into
the knowledge age.
But the 32-year-old scientist, a post-graduate in
molecular biology, is not counting on Malaysia to look after her future.
"I felt very suppressed in Malaysia ,"
said Tan, who moved to neighbouring Singapore , the region's pace-setter for
biotech investment, after a decade of study and research in Malaysia .
"I have benefited from the better research
environment and salary scheme here. Things are much smoother," she said by
phone from the National University of Singapore where she is studying dust
mites and allergies.
Tan estimates that 60 percent of the research teams
she works with in Singapore are from Malaysia, despite her country's efforts
over several years to develop a biotech industry.
The Malaysian government unveiled plans last March
to spend $553.3 million over five years to boost research, attract foreign
investment and build new facilities. But its efforts are wasted unless it can
retain more talented people like Tan.
"By the time we have the research environment
in place, every other country would have taken a slice of the biotech
investment pie," said Iskandar Mizal, head of the state-run Malaysian
Biotech Corporation which oversees the government's strategy.
There is a serious problem facing Malaysia and that
is the problem of Brain Drain. Why are Malaysians overseas not coming back to
work?
Well, pay may be part of the reasons but is not the
main reason. Singapore recruitment team offered Malaysian students there a
salary which is a few times they would expect to get in Malaysia…..... S$40,000
a year for houseman after tax (equivalent to RM86000) which is about 5 times
the pay of a houseman in Malaysia.
But, as I say, pay is not the main problem. The
living expenses overseas is high. And for a person working overseas, the
loneliness and the stress level is also high. So not everyone opts to work overseas
because of pay. Many would not mind to work for lesser pay if they can stay
near to their loved ones.
Why do people choose to work overseas, away from
their loved ones?
Malaysia has many state-of-the-art hospitals and
research centres, which may even be the envy of many overseas countries. But
hardware alone would not attract these experts to come home. In the medical
fields, I have so many friends /classmates working overseas, many in world
renowned centres. Why do they do that?
Some of my classmates and friends did come back as
specialists. After working a few years (many lasted only a few months), most
get disillusioned and went off. There is really not much prospect of career
advancement. How many can hope to become a professor, even when they are an
acknowledged expert in their field? On the other hand, lesser beings are being
promoted to professorship for doing much less.
How many of them can have any say about how things
are to be run? How many of them can blend into the local team where the work
attitude is vastly different from that overseas?
There is an unwritten rule that even if the person
is very good, the head of the team has to be someone from a certain ethnic
group who may not even be half as good as him.
In everyday life, some become disillusioned with
the corruption, the red tape and tidak apa attitude of the officialdom. For an
overseas doctor applying to work home, the application can take up to 6 months
to get approved, whereas, Singapore sends teams overseas to recruit them on the
spot, giving them forms to fill and offering them jobs immediately as long as
they pass their final examination. See the difference?
It is the sense of being wanted and being
appreciated that make these people stay overseas. Back here, they are often
made to feel that they are of a lower class; they do not feel wanted and they
do not feel appreciated…. That is the main reason.
For those with children, the education system puts
them off. Even school children can feel being discriminated, one glaring
example is the 2 systems in Pre-University education.
All these make them pack their bags and off they go
again, leaving behind their parents perhaps, siblings, friends they grew up
together, favouite food that is often not available overseas. No one likes to
be like this; circumstances and a sense of being recognised for their worth
make them go away…It is really sad.
Parents spend huge amount of money educating them,
but the ones who benefit are the Singaporeans, the Americans, the Australians,
the British and so on. As long as race politics is not done away with, this
problem of brain drain will continue and Malaysia will always lack behind the
advanced countries, no matter how many twin towers and Putrajayas we build.
Therefore, basing on all the facts mentioned above, we would only have to
believe what other people said, ie that all along our Government did not bother
about the "Brain Drain" of Non-Malay graduates or
professionals and indeed the more they migrate the merrier because more
job vacancies could be made available to Malay graduates without any
competition at all and the Government also did not care whether or not the
quality of work would be compromised or the excellence of performance could be
achieved..... How sad and how shameful it is if this is true!!
May God save our beloved country please!!
May God save our beloved country please!!
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