Brain Drain
or Brain on Lease (2)?
E. Ablorh-Odjidja
June 11, 2011
I read a piece titled “Brain drain of health
professionals from Ghana and the Health Delivery
Crises” and wondered why we keep throwing up
issues the solution for which requires a basic
understanding that we do not care to accept?
Truth be told, there are health crises in many
parts of the third world because of causes
attributable to the brain drain and others.
The same crisis can be said for other fields,
where needed professionals have been sucked
away.
Also true is the reason stated in this piece I
read, as to why these professionals leave home
for foreign countries:
“The …exodus of health professionals from Ghana
health sector emanates mainly from poor service
conditions, with 66% of respondents indicating
poor wages as the most compelling consideration
for them to consider seeking opportunities
abroad.” Says Prosper Yao Tsikata writer and
author of “My Name, My Race: A young African’s
untold story.”
What the complaint against the “brain drain”
misses is the understanding that we are part of
a global marketplace, where there are no
barriers to needed talents and skills.
And the rewards for these are huge and
highly competitive.
The above global marketplace attraction allows
Essien, for instance, to play for Chelsea
instead of Accra Hearts of Oak.
Most on any Black Star assembled team, each year,
will be formed by a cadre of Ghanaians from
the international circuit players
employed abroad.
These athletes, like the doctors or other
professionals, start up in Ghana and end up
employed overseas.
Roughly stated, this is the face of our
problem depicted by our failure to retain our
trained professionals, including doctors, at
home.
But the condition is not a zero-sum game.
Benefits undergird either way when and where
this phenomenon happens.
Hopefully, the sports metaphor will help explain
vividly the “brain drain” as opposed to the
"brain on the lease" experience.
Unlike Athletes, other skills or professions are
not so age-restricted.
Whereas an athlete has a limited
productive life span, other professionals have
useful benefits that extend further and further
beyond the youthful age and into old age.
Doctors, engineers, and accountants cannot be
recruited yearly from abroad or on tournament by
tournaments basis to lend their talents at home,
as done with our athletes.
Many of these professionals may eventually want to
return to help, but they are also limited by
commitments and limitations
due to what they do abroad.
But the good news is, soon and finally on reaching
the retirement age, they can and are more than
willing to return and lend their skills to help
the nation.
It is within the instance of when these
professionals can return home that the scourge
we now call the "brain drain" can acquire a good
flip side; the “brain on the lease” aspect of
things.
But first, there is a need for a paradigm shift
among our people.
The "brain drain" misnomer must shift to
its potential positive aspect, i.e.; the "brain
on the lease." outlook.
Here we must note the difference between the
athlete and the other professionals.
Both doctors and athletes are subject to the same
global market pulls; this is compounded by the
democratic principle that our constitution
allows for free movement.
But the skills of the athlete will
diminish with age, whereas the other
professional will mature with age.
Regardless, those who go away also carry with them
the hunger to come back home.
There is a need to encourage and welcome
back these professionals.
But coming back home should not be made difficult
or unnecessarily competitive for the doctors and
those professionals who wish to do so.
And this is where our governments have a duty.
The government’s job must be to make homecoming an
attractive option - to make this possible
through policy outreach programs; to start with
a new understanding of the phenomenon called the
“brain drain.”
That understanding, that mind shift, is yet to
occur.
It has to before a governmental outreach
can be started.
The constant harping of “brain drain” may be an
indicator of something else.
That something else is what some call
“envy.”
But still, do we want these professionals
back?
The best approach to bring them back is to start
considering the members of the “brain drain” as
part of a pool of immeasurable resources, or
what we must call the “brain on the lease.”
This is a required paradigm shift.
Once we consider our trained professionals as the
“brain on the lease” types from start, the move
to ask them to return will be made easier
because their leaving the motherland implies the
concept of a return.
All the skills gained overseas on the near
frontiers of knowledge and at no expense to the
government, can be brought back home like a
bounty.
The returns will be astronomically more
in value than what they took out via the "brain
drain.".
Not only newly acquired skills will be brought and
passed on to others within the professions, but
after years of work overseas, the professionals
are likely to bring back tangible assets that
will enhance more, in terms of investment and
expenditures, the business enterprises they
undertake.
I am yet to read a government policy paper,
encouraging these professionals to bring back
their talents to augment skills in professions
or industries at home. Nor the incentives the
government has lined up to make these happen.
Many professionals come back on their own.
But there have been obstacles.
Once in our midst, they encounter
difficulties in integrating themselves into the
very professional places and spaces they want to
be productive at. For these obstacles, the
larger society is the biggest loser.
I happen to live within a community of returned
professionals, the majority of whom are highly
competent professionals. But they are heavily
frustrated by conditions after their return; the
most are the doctors.
These doctors are back with more sharpened skills
and experiences to invest in, but the
opportunities are hard to access.
The opportunities are there, but I am tempted to
think that, psychologically, our collective mind
is not structured to use the seasoned skills of
these returned professionals.
For considerations is how much a doctor with 30
years’ experience abroad worth; in skillset he
or she is likely to bring back, the physical
assets to invest in-country and what the
ultimate impact of all this on the national
health and economy could be.
Concerning doctors, medical tourism anyone?
Indian doctors are encouraged to come home;
bringing back their practices and patients and
by so doing have made India a major hub for
medical tourism.
The above situation is one of the many industries
a “brain on the lease” project can generate for
a country.
Another factor which impact must be looked at,
while considering the “Brain on the lease,”
concept is the retiring age we have imposed on
our country.
The system is structured to retire people at age
60. The “brain on the lease” returnee will show
up usually after age 65. That means finding
responsible productive jobs with the government
is out.
The above adverse situation is compounded by the
eagerness of the generation left at home to
hurry the old out of the system.
The wait
and wish their senior professionals to retire on schedule;
hard on their heels to own the cozy offices they
leave behind.
Will these in-generation be ready to accept the
“brain on lease” prospect who is likely to
compete with them for those cozy positions?
Fat chance!
The average young professional in public
service in line for promotion will quickly
rebuff any competition from abroad.
Even the licensing of fellow doctors who have
studied and practiced abroad has surfaced as a
problem.
No allowance or deferment is given for
experience and age. at the time of this writing.
There is a certification system that requires
doctors to take examinations.
One Ghanaian doctor, very experienced
professor at a renowned medical school in the US
had to balk at the idea of the exam; an
experience I described once as asking a Formula
One professional car racer to recertify in order
to take part in a Go-Kart racing event!.
Are all these obstacles there because of hostility
or rightfully selected acts to bring integrity
to the profession of medicine?
The attitude from some sectors in Ghana will say,
“I can produce equally the same result that
these returnees will bring, anytime and
anywhere. So why do I need them, especially if
it comes at my expense”?
This attitude is the very factor that will make it
hard for the "brain on the lease" concept to
work and then will likely enable the “brain
drain” to endure.
It is our responsibility to jettison this old
notion of "brain drain" and to lodge in its
place the value embedded in the “brain on the
lease” concept.
E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publisher
www.ghanadot.com, Washington, June 17, 2011
Permission to publish: Please feel free to
publish or reproduce, with credits, unedited.
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