IranIran’s Brain Drain Crisis: How Corruption and Repression Are...

Iran’s Brain Drain Crisis: How Corruption and Repression Are Driving a Generation Away

-

Brain drain is a challenge facing Iranian society. Bahram Salavati, researcher and former director of the Iranian Migration Observatory, told the state-run Entekhab news outlet on June 9: “Every 10 years—starting from 2006, the year that administration came in which they called the ‘miracle of the millennium’—we have seen the number of Iranian students abroad double. If we start at 15,000 that year, it reached 30,000 after the first decade. Then in the late 2000s and early 2010s, it rose from 30,000 to 60,000. But just in the past four or five years, that 60,000 has jumped to 120,000 students. Meaning we did what used to take 10 years in just four.”

Terrifying Brain Drain Statistics: Iran Deprived of Its Human Capital

Salavati continued: “If we continue at this pace, we’ll realize what’s happening. For the first time in this country’s history, we have more than 100,000 students abroad—just in numbers. … The return rate is 1%—that’s extremely dangerous. Migration has become one-way. The concept of brain circulation doesn’t apply to Iran at all. And this is the picture we’re facing in 2025, while the major shocks are still ahead of us.”

Growing Wave of Professor Migration Poses Serious Challenge To Iran’s Scientific Future

According to credible reports, between 2007 and 2021, around 150,000 to 180,000 scientific professionals left Iran—resulting in an annual loss of $50 to $70 billion. Worst of all, only 1% of these elites consider returning, while the global average return rate for skilled migrants is 7%. This means Iran is not only losing its elite to brain drain but is effectively gifting them permanently to other countries.

OECD Data on Iranian Brain Drain

According to data from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), over 20% of Iranians living abroad hold higher education degrees. From 1979 to 2018, the number of Iranian emigrants grew from 500,000 to 3.1 million, increasing from 1.3% to 3.8% of the country’s population. The primary destinations for these emigrants are the United States, Canada, Germany, and the United Kingdom. In the United States alone, 96% of patents registered by Iranian inventors between 2007 and 2012 belonged to Iranians residing abroad. Furthermore, 110,000 Iranian researchers and scholars work at universities and research institutions outside the country—equivalent to one-third of Iran’s total research workforce.

Iran: Some Nurses Are Homeless and Sleep in Their Cars

Crisis in Key Sectors: From Doctors to Engineers

Brain drain is not limited to students. The healthcare sector is in even more critical condition. Mohammad Reza Zafarghandi, secretary-general of Iran’s Medical Community, warned that 80% of medical students are considering emigration. In 2022, 6,500 doctors and medical specialists left the country. Additionally, 3,000 nurses emigrate from Iran each year, despite the government spending around $68,000 to train each one.

The situation in the information technology sector is no better. Over 50% of employees in Iran’s tech startups intend to migrate, and most have no plans to return. From pilots and truck drivers to construction workers, people from all walks of life are fleeing. Even 83 out of the 86 recent Olympiad medalists have emigrated.

Cronyism and Corruption: The Silent Killers of Talent

Why has brain drain become a norm? The answer is simple: corruption, cronyism, and the regime’s incompetence.

Each Year, 1,500 Nurses Leave Their Jobs, 500 Emigrate from Iran

Runaway inflation has devalued the national currency by 45% in a single year, reducing professionals’ wages to a joke. An engineer in Iran earns the equivalent of $600 per month, whereas abroad they can earn significantly more.

Brain drain is a national crisis that has robbed Iran of its future. Thirty percent of the population dreams of emigrating, and 62% of those who leave have no intention of returning. This is not merely an economic problem—it is a cultural and social catastrophe.

 

Latest news

Iran’s Regime Executes Two More Protesters from the January Uprising

This morning, two more protesters were executed by Iran's regime. Mizan, the state-run news agency affiliated with the judiciary of...

The Collapse of Iran’s Economic Resilience

The latest international reports show that the Iranian regime’s economy ranks near the bottom among 130 global economies. This...

Iranian Nurses Protest Unpaid Outstanding Claims

On May 30, a group of nurses in Yazd Province held a protest rally outside the Governor-General's Office, demanding...

Physician Migration, A Warning Alarm for Iran’s Healthcare System

With physicians and nurses emigrating abroad, the human resources crisis in Iran’s healthcare system has entered a new phase....

Denmark Accuses Iran’s Regime of Terrorism Threat

According to Al Arabiya, Denmark's Security and Intelligence Service (PET) announced that Iran's regime has played a more prominent...

Workers At Iran’s Makran Steel Face Nine Months of Unpaid Wages

The ongoing crisis of unpaid workers’ wages in contracted projects has once again made headlines at Makran Steel in...

Must read

Iran conflict could send oil to high: Raymond James

Reuters: Oil prices may surge to a record if...

Bye bye, captain

The Sun: The captain of the Royal Navy warship that...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you