Optimal Career Strategies and Brain Drain in Academia

被引:6
|
作者
Seidl, Andrea [1 ]
Wrzaczek, Stefan [1 ,2 ]
El Ouardighi, Fouad [3 ]
Feichtinger, Gustav [1 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Vienna Univ Technol, Inst Stat & Math Methods Econ, Dept Operat Res & Control Syst, A-1040 Vienna, Austria
[2] Univ Vienna, Dept Business Adm, Vienna, Austria
[3] ESSEC Business Sch, Cergy Pontoise, France
[4] Austrian Acad Sci, Vienna Inst Demog, Wittgenstein Ctr Demog & Global Human Capital, IIASA,VID OAW WU, A-1010 Vienna, Austria
基金
奥地利科学基金会;
关键词
Optimal control; Academic career; History dependence; Human capital; CONCAVE PRODUCTION FUNCTION; OPTIMAL-GROWTH; LIFE-CYCLE; SCIENTISTS; MODEL; PRODUCTIVITY; TRAJECTORIES; INDUSTRY; PATHS; TIME;
D O I
10.1007/s10957-015-0747-3
中图分类号
C93 [管理学]; O22 [运筹学];
学科分类号
070105 ; 12 ; 1201 ; 1202 ; 120202 ;
摘要
Some areas of science face the problem that many academics prefer the private sector over academia. This negatively affects the quality and the quantity of the research output as well as the availability of competent lecturers in these areas. The present paper investigates by means of an optimal control model how the reward of competencies in research and teaching in the private sector affects investments into these skills as well as the decision on whether and when to optimally leave academia. As the decision between academia and industry is obvious if a scientist has strong preference for either, we focus on scenarios where this is not the case. We notably show that the dynamic trade-off between academia and industry results in various forms of brain drain. In this regard, we first confirm that if academic competencies are well rewarded in the private sector, the most competent academics will leave academia. Further, we find scenarios where a scholar with intermediate competencies will try to improve his or her skills as much as possible before leaving academia and scenarios in which it is optimal to not put much effort into work and let competencies slowly depreciate before leaving. Even if scientists are highly skilled and motivated to stay, if poor working conditions do not support knowledge acquisition, competencies will inevitably fall and academia will consist solely of mediocre scholars. The results suggest that brain drain can be destructive for academia in the long run.
引用
收藏
页码:268 / 295
页数:28
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Commercializing Science: Is There a University "Brain Drain" from Academic Entrepreneurship?
    Toole, Andrew A.
    Czarnitzki, Dirk
    MANAGEMENT SCIENCE, 2010, 56 (09) : 1599 - 1614
  • [22] A career in academia? Determinants of academic career aspirations among PhD students in one research university in the US
    Eunyoung Kim
    Stefanie Benson
    Taghreed A. Alhaddab
    Asia Pacific Education Review, 2018, 19 : 273 - 283
  • [23] A career in academia? Determinants of academic career aspirations among PhD students in one research university in the US
    Kim, Eunyoung
    Benson, Stefanie
    Alhaddab, Taghreed A.
    ASIA PACIFIC EDUCATION REVIEW, 2018, 19 (02) : 273 - 283
  • [24] Brain drain, brain gain, and economic growth in China
    Ha, Wei
    Yi, Junjian
    Zhang, Junsen
    CHINA ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2016, 38 : 322 - 337
  • [25] Remodellers of female career preference in academia: Does religiosity serve as a mediator?
    Sikki, Nurhaeni
    STUDIES IN THE EDUCATION OF ADULTS-NIACE, 2024,
  • [26] Human capital and mobility as competing antecedents of career success: the case of academia
    Varela, Otmar
    Premeaux, Sonya
    Bajwa, Naeem
    MANAGEMENT RESEARCH REVIEW, 2023, 46 (10): : 1388 - 1404
  • [27] From academia to industry: forging a scientific career path that is uniquely you
    Webb, Lauren M.
    IMMUNOLOGY AND CELL BIOLOGY, 2024, 102 (03): : 164 - 166
  • [28] Education, redistribution and the threat of brain drain
    Haupt, Alexander
    Janeba, Eckhard
    INTERNATIONAL TAX AND PUBLIC FINANCE, 2009, 16 (01) : 1 - 24
  • [29] The determinants of brain drain in developing countries
    Ngoma, Abubakar
    Ismail, Normaz
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ECONOMICS, 2013, 40 (08) : 744 - +
  • [30] The process of brain drain in peripheral regions
    Malul, Miki
    APPLIED ECONOMICS LETTERS, 2015, 22 (17) : 1419 - 1423