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Canadian brain gain policies are bearing fruit, says sector chief

Further policies to attract foreign researchers will boost efforts to recruit top talent to Canadian universities, explains Universities Canada president

Published on
April 9, 2019
Last updated
April 9, 2019
Source: Alamy

New bespoke immigration assistance for academics considering a move to Canada will help to continue the steady influx of research talent into the country following the election of Donald Trump, the head of Universities Canada has said.

Speaking to聽探花视频, Paul Davidson, president of Universities Canada, which represents 96 higher education institutions, said plans to invest C$200 million (拢114 million) in immigration services unveiled in last month鈥檚 federal government聽budget聽would consolidate his country鈥檚 reputation as a welcoming place for foreign academics.

Under the聽plans, some C$78.6 million has been assigned to help improve the processing of Canadian work and study permits, as well as visitor visas, including the creation of a unit to handle applications from foreign researchers.

鈥淗aving this kind of concierge service for academics and their spouses will certainly help them get through our immigration process more quickly,鈥 said Mr Davidson, who said that the budget changes 鈥渨ere entirely symptomatic of a system that wants to show it is open for business鈥 to foreign researchers.

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The budget plan is Canada鈥檚 latest initiative to bring top research talent to its universities. In March 2017, its government聽new funding worth C$117 million to recruit world-class professors from around the world under its Canada 150 Research Chairs programme, with the one-time funding scheme offering professors up to C$1 million a year depending on their research.

鈥淲e鈥檝e had 200 serious applications for these 25 posts 鈥 including many from Nobel-quality researchers 鈥 so it鈥檚 proved attractive for many truly world-class academics,鈥 said Mr Davidson.

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Having universities capable of attracting this level of researcher was testament to the strong progress of Canada鈥檚 research system, he added.

鈥淲e are still a young country and, 50 years ago, it would have been audacious to think we would have the set of universities we do. Even 20 years ago, it would聽have seemed unlikely,鈥 he said.

Asked if Canada had benefited from US academics leaving America to escape the Trump administration, Mr Davidson said this was a factor for some incoming scholars.

鈥淗owever, the Trump administration has kept research funding high, so there has not been the exodus [of researchers] that some predicted,鈥 said Mr Davidson.

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Mike Mahon, president and vice-chancellor at the University of Lethbridge, in Alberta, told聽THE聽that one US researcher recruited under the Canada 150 Research Chairs programme had left the US, citing President Trump鈥檚 election.

鈥淲e recruited someone from the University of Texas who brought his entire research team with him 鈥 his computing needs actually doubled the computing capacity of the entire university,鈥 he said, adding that he 鈥渁bsolutely came because of [Trump]鈥.

President Trump has also recently sought to impose fixed time limits on student visas 鈥 a move聽that many believe will see more international students head to Canada, where numbers have grown four-fold to 500,000 since 2000. That number could double to聽1 million over the next decade, partly聽because of聽Canada鈥檚 generous post-study work visa arrangements, experts believe.

That, however, will not be a source of concern for Canadians, believes Professor Mahon, Universities Canada鈥檚 chair. 鈥淎s a big country with a lot of capacity, we鈥檝e grown and benefited hugely from immigration 鈥 this is just another step.鈥

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jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (1)

"the Trump administration has kept research funding high"? High? Really? The USG spends 0.8% of GDP on R&D. China spends 2.5% of a much larger GDP on its R&D, which is why Huawei.

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