Brain drain or brain gain? Technology diffusion and learning on-the-job
This paper develops a theory of technology transfer when technology is embodied in human capital and learning requires on-the-job communication between managers and workers. Patterns of knowledge diffusion depend on where high knowledge managers work and how much time they allocate to training workers. Managers appropriate the surplus training creates and in the open economy managers face a cross-country trade-off between labor costs and the value of knowledge transfer. Complementarity between country-wide efficiency and managerial knowledge makes learning more valuable in the North meaning that high knowledge managers choose to work in the North and globalization precipitates a brain drain of high knowledge Southern agents to the North. The brain drain reduces learning opportunities in the South and exacerbates cross-country knowledge differences.
The text is part of a series CEP Discussion Papers, CEPDP1168 45 pages
Classification:
F2 - International Factor Movements and International Business ; J24 - Human Capital; Skills; Occupational Choice; Labor Productivity ; O33 - Technological Change: Choices and Consequences; Diffusion Processes