The brain gain

http://www.dawn.com/weekly/dmag/dmag1.htm
14 March 2004 Sunday 22 Muharram 1425

The brain gain

*By Saad Shafqat *

For various reasons, brilliant young professionals are now overlooking opportunities overseas and investing their future in Pakistan. It is time Something was done to facilitate the phenomenon.

The United States, a nation of some 280 million, admits a million immigrants every year. Probably another half-a-million enter illegally. These numbers are just the tip of the iceberg, because millions more would move to America given half a chance. Most of these people come from disadvantaged parts of the world and see in America a hope for a better life. The fact, let’s face it, is that if the US offered a hassle-free Green Card to everyone who wanted it, most of the Third World would empty out.

It is easy to understand. Who wouldn’t want security of life and property, material comforts and recourse to justice, all of which America potentially offers. At least this is what the general perception is. In a country like Pakistan, where the majority live on the fringes of the social order and try to eke out a living from around $450 a year, emigrating to America is not just an idea, but an ideology cutting across all segments of the population except perhaps for the most wealthy or the most maverick.

With the possibility of such a dazzling life on offer, access to the American dream is tightly regulated. Realizing that dream is, however, relatively straightforward for qualified professionals - doctors, engineers, architects, business managers, IT professionals - who can successfully compete in the US job market. Developing countries, particularly Asian countries such as Pakistan, routinely lose large numbers of such individuals to the US, where affluence and professional satisfaction await.

Indeed, the most educated immigrants to the US are now coming from Asia. According to the US Census Bureau, an Asian-born immigrant is twice as likely to have an advanced degree (master’s or higher) compared to the general American population. It is a crippling demographic haemorrhage in which developing countries lose the very people from whom they stand to benefit the most.

Interestingly, though, this is not true for all professionals. Despite great opportunities in the US, a small minority of qualified individuals do nevertheless return to a life in their native countries. It is happening quite a bit next door in India, where it contributes to a burgeoning middle-class prosperity, but it is also happening in Pakistan.

Nestled along the banks of the Charles River in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard Business School stands at the top of the world’s business and management academia. Every year it graduates around 900 MBAs, all snapped up by six-figure salaries in corporate America. On an average, these graduates include two to three Pakistanis every year. One such graduate is NK, a Karachiite who left for the US after A-levels and eventually found his way into Harvard Business School. After getting his MBA, NK followed the pack, accepted an offer in corporate America, and stayed there for several years. Now, however, he wants to move back and has started searching for the right job in Pakistan to return to.

“I want to return because of my parents and family attachments,” he says, “and also because I feel I could have a comfortable and satisfying life back in Pakistan,” says NK who is very clear that most professionals would return to Pakistan if they could, but some perennial issues keep them away. Foremost in his opinion is security for one’s life, family and property which, although a risk in the US as well, is perceived to be a bigger risk here in Pakistan. “It doesn’t matter what the reality is,” he observes, “because on an issue like security, perception is the reality.”

The other nagging apprehension is proper recognition of merit. It is unsettling to think that one’s work environment could be anything less than meritorious, but there is a feeling that enterprises in Pakistan - both in the private as well as public sectors - may reward personal connections and political lobbying that have nothing to do with individual merit or performance.

Someone whose example could perhaps allay some of these anxieties is Usman Mobin, chief technology officer of NADRA (National Database and Registration Authority), the government agency responsible for developing our national database and cataloguing infrastructure.

After completing A-levels from Lahore, Usman won a scholarship to MIT, arguably the world’s premier engineering institution, where he obtained a bachelor’s and then a master’s degree in Computer Science. In early 2002 he was offered a job with NADRA, which he accepted, though with some trepidation.

“I was delighted at the opportunity to return home to Pakistan, but I was also apprehensive that I was undertaking a government assignment and I would not be able to deliver unless I was properly empowered,” he recalls. So how has it been so far? “Much better than expected,” replies Usman enthusiastically. Now living and working in Islamabad, he says he is very satisfied with the resources and authority he was given, and it has helped greatly in accomplishing the tasks expected of him.

Usman admits that in his days at MIT he never had it in mind to return to Pakistan. Like everyone else in his situation, he had fully expected to settle down in the US. He gives credit to Brigadier Saleem Moeen, the NADRA chief, for luring him back to Pakistan and empowering him with the right tools and the proper degree of work freedom.

When asked about social annoyances like erratic electricity and water supply and uncertain garbage disposal - things that might feel bothersome to a Pakistani returning from suburban American comforts - Usman dismisses them as mere trivialities. He says his main concern is his work, in which he is helping develop the foundational systems for all major government functions, with the potential to impact such core areas as taxation, resource allocation, electoral rolls, motor vehicle registration and national citizen registration. Usman says his work has given him a sense of achievement about contributing towards a national cause. “What more could one want,” he asks somewhat rhetorically.

Perhaps more than any other, it is the medical profession that enjoys the comforts of American living in the greatest numbers. It is, in fact, one of the easiest ways to settle in the US, and everyone knows it. Every year hundreds of Pakistani medical graduates successfully negotiate the American medical qualifying examination USMLE and secure postgraduate (residency) training positions in US hospitals.

There continues to be great demand for doctors in the US and rewarding jobs are waiting for every residency graduate. America’s overwhelming lure for doctors can be deduced from bare numbers. Of the hundreds of Pakistani doctors who find work in America every year, the ones who return can be counted on fingertips.

Dr Mahnaz Shah, who recently joined a leading hospital in Karachi as an eye specialist after training and working over a fourteen-year period in America, has every attribute to suggest she would have settled into a fine life in the US. After A-levels in Karachi, Mahnaz earned a bachelor's degree from Rice University in Houston and then an MD from Baylor College of Medicine. Thereafter she landed a postgraduate training spot in ophthalmology, which is a highly competitive specialty. It was enough to fetch her a generous private-practice job and a plush residence in an upscale Houston neighbourhood. So why did she return?

"I came back to Pakistan because it is home. This is where my family is and this is where I want my children to grow up," says Mahnaz, who is disarmingly down-to-earth despite her list of accomplishments. When asked if the move might represent a compromise in professional terms, Mahnaz was ready with a counterpoint. "On the contrary, I think it is possible for me to accomplish more here in Pakistan than in the US. There is the opportunity to be more productive, to try and make a bigger difference," she says.

Even the manifest concerns about being a woman in Pakistani society were not an issue for her. "For me personally, as a working mother, I get more respect here and I have deeper support systems and social resources to draw on," she notes. Without venturing too far into gender concerns, the point has to be made that women, who surely have a raw deal in most parts of Pakistani society, may well have a particularly privileged position in its upper echelons.

While family ties and obligations to aging parents are the common link in qualified professionals relocating to Pakistan, they are still not an adequate explanation. Such obligations are associated with everyone, yet only a minuscule fraction is using the vehicle of repatriation to fulfil them. The individuals who return have clearly reasoned that a future in Pakistan can be as gratifying - perhaps in some cases even more gratifying - as the future they have passed up in America. Not everyone can return to Pakistan and take the jobs of their choice, but for those who can - and there is every evidence that this is happening increasingly - a life in Pakistan is now competing with a future in America.

But it can hardly be all about having the right job to return to because, undoubtedly, the jobs in America are better. Dr Arif Amir Nawaz is someone who returned home to Lahore even though he had no job to come back to, let alone the job of his choice. "The important thing for me was to be home and to be with my family," says Arif, who had left Pakistan soon after his MBBS and had gone on to specialize and work as a gastroenterologist in New York, spending a total of ten years abroad.

The initial period after returning was quite difficult and Arif and his wife Abeera (also a doctor) went through some uncertain times. "But," he continues, "I was very familiar with Lahore, my hometown, and I knew I could make a life here."

After working for a while with one of Lahore's noted specialists, Arif has since set up his own practice and also has a faculty position at Fatima Memorial Medical College. It took a few years, but he now feels satisfied and settled. Would he make the same decision about returning to Pakistan if given another chance? "Absolutely," says Arif. "I understood that the initial struggle was a necessary gestational period that had to be experienced. I had faith that with commitment and integrity, things would get sorted out, and Allah has been kind," he adds.

If neither family ties nor promising jobs completely explain the decision of successful professionals to repatriate, where else do the answers lie? Perhaps it is also a question of mindset and attitude - a way of looking at the same set of factors yet seeing something different and novel in them that most people do not see. Could it be that something in these individuals' life experience - in their education, upbringing, family life or other exposure - has shaped their personality to see Pakistan not as a glass that is half empty, but a glass that is half full?If there is indeed a mindset and an attitude that defines this reversal of the brain drain - a brain gain, if you will - to Pakistan, few people would exemplify it better than Murad Jamil. He obtained a bachelor's degree in architecture from Karachi and then won a scholarship to the University of California at Los Angeles where he earned a master's. His credentials were enough to land him a job with the prestigious Bechtel Corporation, one of the world's leading architectural, engineering and construction firms. For over five years he studied and worked in Los Angeles, and lived the California life. But eventually he became uneasy with the idea of a permanent career in America.

"I came back to be near my parents, but also because I felt I had a better chance of reaching the top of my profession in my own country than in America," says Murad candidly. As with Dr Arif Nawaz, Murad too did not return to a pre-negotiated job and the early period was filled with anxiety. Although originally from Karachi, he moved to Islamabad and began working with an architectural firm. But the goal was always there to have something of his own and, finally, in 1998, Murad took the plunge and launched his own architectural practice. In a short time, a generous list of big-name clients was racked up.

Understandably, Murad describes his experience as "fabulous" and is quick to thank Allah and the prayers and wishes of his parents. Islamabad, a place he had always looked up to as a "dream city" though he had never lived there, has fully come up to his expectations. As with the other interviewees, Murad's professional credentials ensure that re-entering the US job market is always an option, but he cannot imagine giving up his life in Pakistan. Murad lists courage, patience, a supportive spouse and, above all, honesty, as the factors that helped him return home and achieve a fulfilling life in Pakistan.

It is tempting to speculate that this brain gain phenomenon is the result of a new American climate in the wake of 9/11, in which an unflattering caricature of Islam has begun to percolate in American public and private discourse. However, the interviewees for this article who returned to Pakistan after the events of September 11, 2001, deny that it factored in their decisions.

They explain that for most Muslim professionals who are well integrated and adjusted, day-to-day life has not really altered, and America's ability to attract the world's brightest remains uncompromised. They argue that while developments like the Patriot Act and a general disfavour with Islam may have made life less palatable for many Muslims in America, the country's corporate and suburban charms - the powerful attractions that draw Pakistani professionals to America in the first place - have not changed.At the same time, it also needs to be said that living in America isn't all about wealth and comfort. There clearly are negative aspects to the experience of being an immigrant in American society, such as a corporate glass ceiling and the lack of an unquestioned social acceptability. Whether for these reasons, or because Pakistan is always part of us wherever we go, thoughts about one day relocating home are never far from the minds of overseas Pakistanis.

There may be a very real opportunity now to augment this brain gain phenomenon by taking advantage of this overseas discontent, muted though it is. One strategy would be to set up a national repatriation commission that expatriate professionals can approach through internet and e-mail with the expectation of being matched to a rewarding opportunity where they could best add value and which will also recognize their true worth.

The Higher Education Commission is already working along similar lines by offering internationally competitive salaries to accomplished expatriate Pakistani scientists if they take up faculty positions in Pakistani universities. This could - and should - be worth expanding to many other fields.

Finally, where in this brain gain calculus is love for Pakistan? John F. Kennedy once inspired the world by telling people to ask not what their country can do for them, but what they can do for their country. He was talking to his fellow Americans, but it was a message that rang true with every citizen of every nation. But that was forty years ago and today we live in an era, or at least in a country, where patriotism seems to be passe.

Who can really say what are the bonds that keep tearing a few bright Pakistanis away from the powerful American magnet? Obligations to aging parents, attractive jobs, a refreshing and different mindset, or an emotional bond with the home country? Perhaps, in the end, these are all imponderables. Perhaps ultimately it is about something very simple - as simple as simply being home. Whatever the simple or complex reasons behind it, it can be nothing but a great boon for our country and society.

A few who took the plunge

http://www.dawn.com/weekly/dmag/dmag2.htm

The Art Institute of Chicago is 150 years old, and houses one of the world’s finest art collections. It also houses a famous school offering one of the world’s most sought after educational programmes for a career in art. Bani Abidi is the quintessential Karachi girl educated at Mama Parsi and St Joseph’s College who had set her eyes on studying at the Institute. After a bachelor’s in fine arts from the National College of Arts (NCA) in Lahore, Bani selected samples of her best abstract work and sent in her application to Chicago. The Institute said it was delighted to accept her into their master’s in Fine Arts programme.

After completing her two-year degree, Bani spent another four years in Chicago, but earlier this year she returned home to Pakistan. “Studying at the Institute opened up all kinds of opportunities, but I had a strange feeling about staying on in the US,” she says. With a classic artist’s sensibility, she explains that as an outsider to American society, one’s experiences are reducing to just being an immigrant, which is interesting, “but in a limited way”.

Did America drive her away or did Pakistan pull her back? “Both,” she says without hesitation, and goes on to add, “It’s wonderful being back. I think it’s an exciting time in our cultural evolution. Being an artist in a place where everyone shares your history is a fascinating challenge, because it forces you to deal with subtleties. I think all expatriate artists must feel a strong intellectual motivation to return. I know I certainly did.”

Bani is now living in Lahore and teaching at her alma mater, the NCA. Her art is being expressed through short videos on complex subjects like nationalism and the diaspora. Through her work she hopes to introduce the concept of experiential art and add it to Pakistan’s already rich history of decorative arts. Doctors, engineers, architects and MBAs are all very well, but one cannot help feeling that it is ultimately artists like Bani Abidi who will come to define the conscience and sensibilities of a nation and its peoples.

- Saad Shafqat

MONIS RAHMAN, a 33-year-old entrepreneur who is back in Pakistan - Lahore, to be precise - after spending almost fifteen years in the US, is geared up to establish a successful business in the country. Undaunted by the difficult task of moving back and adjusting to a “totally different and often frustrating” life in Pakistan, this young professional finds the task challenging and exciting at the same time. His aim is to establish the local branch of his IT business.

Talking of success, it is not something Monis is unfamiliar with. Having owned several companies as well as having worked with some of the leading IT professionals in the US, Monis has had an extremely successful and lucrative career.

Monis got his “dream job” with Intel upon graduating from the University of Wisconsin at Madison. He spent three-and-a-half years at the company and in the meantime completed his studies from Stanford University. He then founded his own consultancy firm, Crestech, and launched a website by the name of eDaycare.com, which was an instant success, having been featured on the online edition of CNN.com and lauded for its enterprising approach. Monis has not looked back since.

“My latest venture is Naseeb.com, which has recently been launched in Pakistan. I was very active in Muslim activities in the US and realized that most North American Muslims were facing the problem of getting to know other Muslims, especially when it came to the issue of marriage,” says Monis. Naseeb.com, an online community that aims to connect young, educated, professional Muslims, provides a safe and discreet environment for interaction, according to Monis.

Monis has set his offices in Lahore and plans to spend half the year in the city controlling engineering operations, and the other half in the US. “I didn’t have any knowledge of working in Pakistan,” said Monis, “and so far, it’s been a learning experience.” Monis, who came back to be with his parents “to do something good for the country”, describes his experiences as both exasperating and thrilling. “We have a brilliant workforce in Pakistan and all we need to do is harness the intellect and capitalize on it.”

Monis feels that people who want to move back to Pakistan have immense opportunities if they are determined to make it work. After 9/11, he believes life for Muslims in America has changed, even though Americans on the whole are tolerant and open-minded. His investors are mostly Americans, and he believes that the fact that they agreed to invest in a Pakistani company shows their broad-mindedness.

“I cannot stress enough on the need for young professionals to return, be brave, take the risk and do something for themselves and their country.”

*-Sobia Aslam *

KASHIF NAZIR, 28, is back in Pakistan after working for two years in New York as a Certified Public Accountant (CPA) and is one of many young professionals who have returned to the country after 9/11. Though the discrimination that followed the event was not the sole reason for his return, he does define it as a secondary factor in his decision to come back.

Kashif, who is currently working in a large textile plant in Lahore, does not regret his decision because he believes that Pakistan is “slowly developing the infrastructure” to absorb young professionals. Even then, given a choice, he says he would have preferred to stay back in the US for “some more time”.

“It’s not like there was open discrimination, but a lot of my friends were laid off and did not get any response when they applied for further employment,” recalls Kashif. “There was a lot of frustration there and one never knew when he would be asked to leave.”

Adjusting back to life in Pakistan may not be easy, warns Kashif. “I was lucky in the sense that I knew people here, so I got a job easily, but for people who do not have contacts, it is very frustrating to start anew in Pakistan.”

Kashif believes that the government needs to provide attractive opportunities to those Pakistanis who wish to come back and work, invest their money or set up a business here.

*-Sobia Aslam *

awesome article irem.. thanks.

most welcome bro :) pata kia, dawn sunday mag articles are often quite good, you should surf in and chek em out :)

Thanks sis. These were really informative articles!:k:

nice article. good to know that Mobin is doing so well Masha'Allah

brains are worthless without capital and entrepreneurial culture to reverse the tide of the last 40 yrs.

How does it stand on the other fronts?

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Matsui: *
brains are worthless without capital and entrepreneurial culture to reverse the tide of the last 40 yrs.

How does it stand on the other fronts?
[/QUOTE]

One step/leg at a time.

This is a great article, thank you for sharing.

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by hmcq: *

One step/leg at a time.
[/QUOTE]

HMCQ, instead of finance and I banking you should think abut becoming a politician or a teacher... such analytical reply is reserved for those professions..

if all you see is the negative sides of things Mats you under perform on your own underexpectations - I believe thats from the McKinsey Doctrine.

As far as I can tell a recent study clearly found that politicians got an above average return on their financial holdings so I dont know if that means fnanciers are lousy at their jobs or polititians make for better investors :)

And am I sure you could have provided a much more analytical reponse than the two liner you had above if you wanted to and perhaps explain why brains are worthless without capital and enterpreneurial culture. Living in glass houses again are we?

Great article...
:) wierd to see a guy i know on the list of returnees!

http://www.gupistan.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=143138#post2345096