Israel cannot afford to lose its best minds – not morally, not strategically, and certainly not economically.
For decades, Israel has rightly celebrated itself as the Start-Up Nation, ultimately built, defended, and strengthened by people – by scientists developing breakthrough technologies, physicians advancing new therapeutics and sustaining public health, and scholars ensuring intellectual resilience. In a country as small, resource-constrained, and security-challenged as Israel, human capital is not one national asset among many. It is the primary national asset.
This is why the challenge of Israeli brain-drain is not merely an academic concern. It is a strategic national imperative.
Each year, hundreds of Israel’s brightest researchers, physicians, and innovators leave for postdoctoral fellowships, advanced training, or professional opportunities abroad. This global experience is not the problem; on the contrary, it is essential. Exposure to the world’s leading laboratories, hospitals, and industries strengthens Israeli excellence and ensures its international leadership. The true challenge begins when too many of these extraordinary individuals do not come back.
When Israel loses a scientist or a doctor, it not only loses one family’s income tax. It loses advanced research, future patents, medical breakthroughs, startup creation, academic leadership, and defense and security innovation.
Research commissioned for ScienceAbroad – our Israel-based nonprofit organization that harnesses the power of senior Israeli scientists living abroad – found that over a full career, every additional scientist who returns to Israel can generate enormous national value, while each one who does not return represents a profound long-term economic and strategic loss. One analysis estimated roughly NIS 20 million in direct lifetime economic loss for every scientist who remains abroad.
But the true cost is even greater. It is social. It is educational. It is geopolitical.
Israel’s qualitative edge – in science, medicine, technology, and defense – has always depended on a fragile ecosystem of excellence. A nation of fewer than 10 million people cannot compete through size. It competes through ingenuity. If that ingenuity is gradually eroded as talent relocates elsewhere, Israel risks weakening the very foundations of its social mobility, economic growth, healthcare systems, and national security.
Israeli scientists, physicians, and a strategic asset
At Scienceabroad, we believe Israeli scientists and physicians abroad are one of Israel’s greatest strategic reserves. Most do not leave because they want to abandon Israel. They leave to grow, to specialize, to excel, and then to come back and contribute to nation-building. Our mission is to ensure Israel remains the place where that excellence finds its home.
That means creating real and meaningful pathways back: competitive academic opportunities, stronger industry absorption, physician reintegration, professional networks, and national policies that recognize returning talent as a national priority.
This is even bigger than economics. Bringing minds back home strengthens Israeli society by reinforcing the middle class, expanding opportunity in the periphery, reducing inequality, and ensuring that Israel’s next generation grows up in a country that still leads the world in discovery and innovation.
Our upcoming science conference in New York represents a paradigm shift in how we approach returning to Israel. It brings together hundreds of researchers for a professional, high-level engagement with leaders of Israeli academia, with a clear and deliberate goal: to support those who wish to return home to Israel, and encourage many others to do the same.
Israel was founded by those who came here to build and be built. Our generation’s task is to ensure that Israel’s scientists, doctors, and innovators continue doing the same.
Israel’s future cannot be secured by natural resources. It will be secured by human brilliance.
Thus, the return of talent is not just about reversing brain drain. It is about building Israel’s future.
Rivka Carmi, MD, CBE, is the chairwoman of the Board of ScienceAbroad. Nadav Douani is the CEO of ScienceAbroad.
Source:
www.jpost.com





