Opinion: Trump is giving us a chance to reverse the brain drain to the U.S.

4 hours ago 2
U.S. President Donald Trump speaks on his first 100 days at Macomb County Community College Sports Expo Center, Tuesday, April 29, 2025, in Warren, Mich.U.S. President Donald Trump speaks on his first 100 days at Macomb County Community College Sports Expo Center, Tuesday, April 29, 2025, in Warren, Mich. Photo by AP Photo/Paul Sancya

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Canadians often complain that many of our brightest stars move south. The list of distinguished expats is long and impressive: artists, academics, entrepreneurs, managers, athletes and more. The phrase “brain drain” is familiar to all of us. Thanks to President Donald Trump, Canada has an unprecedented opportunity to reverse the research brain drain. We should seize it.

Financial Post

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The Canadian economy is not in good shape. Productivity growth is negative. The gap between per capita income in Canada and the United States is at its widest in nearly a century. When provincial incomes are adjusted for purchasing power, Ontario is virtually indistinguishable from Alabama — one of the poorest U.S. states.

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There are many reasons for Canada’s underperformance. The long-term leakage of talent to the United States has clearly played a role. But, thanks to President Trump, Canada now has a unique chance to reverse the brain drain — particularly in STEM fields: science, technology, engineering and mathematics.

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The Trump administration is suspending or clawing back research funding at elite American universities. Here’s a partial list: Cornell ($1 billion frozen), Northwestern ($790 million frozen), Johns Hopkins ($800 million terminated), Brown ($520 million halted), Columbia ($400 million suspended), Harvard ($2.2 billion frozen) and the University of Pennsylvania ($175 million cut). Reductions at the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) are further destabilizing the STEM research ecosystem. No major U.S. research university will be spared the chaos and uncertainty.

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The Trump administration says these cuts are part of its effort to combat diversity, equity, and inclusion programs and respond to antisemitism on campus. Whether or not we agree with these justifications is beside the point. What matters for Canada is that the chaos is an opening to elevate its global standing in STEM research and jump-start its struggling economy.

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Scientists are passionate about their work. But passion is not enough. It needs to be coupled with stable financial support. U.S. scientists are already looking for alternatives. Canada should move quickly and aggressively to become that alternative. The strategy is clear: induce top-tier U.S.-based scientists to move their labs to Canadian institutions by offering them guaranteed funding and research continuity.

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What’s in it for Canadians? A lot. The United States dominates high tech, bioscience and medicine because of close ties between research universities and industry. Universities do basic science that the private sector then turns into innovation and jobs. It’s no accident that Silicon Valley is right next door to Stanford and Berkeley. The same applies to Cambridge, Massachusetts — home to MIT and Harvard but also a hub of biomedical entrepreneurship. Research creates high-value jobs, attracts capital and drives growth. Canada has the tools to take advantage of the opportunity the Trump administration has given it. We just need to up our ante.

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