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Page 200 of Saadaat Jozveh: More and more qualified people are moving from poor to rich countries to fill vacancies in specialist areas like engineering, computing and medicine. Some people believe that by encouraging the movement of such people rich countries are stealing from poor countries. Others feel that this is only part of the natural movement of workers around the world.  What is your opinion?  Do you think rich countries should pay poorer countries for the people they encourage to come?  What other measures could rich countries take to encourage qualified people to stay and develop their own countries? In today’s world brain drain is being described as a major disturbance to developing countries. In fact, although poor countries spare no efforts in order to achieve higher and better standards of living, loss of intelligent people losing intelligence is one of the most crucial impediments these countries are being faced with which has caused them huge amounts of damages. Despite stealing smart people or specialists is neither is it a crime, nor is it illegal, a majority of people have reservations about this phenomenon and think of it as a crime which is being committed by rich governments. For instance, they may claim that while a nation is suffering from inadequate health care facilities, having the full benefit of a knowledgeable genius surgeon like Prof. Sami’ee, iran's best neurologist, is definitely unfair. Moreover, some of these/such critics them blame both 3rd world governments- by not providing promising infrastructures-, and the immigrants themselves for since their lack of patriotism. either. On the other hand, most of the elites and skilled workers living in underdeveloped countries are not only are they being paid in low salaries, but also they are facing with limited career prospects. As a result, they become attracted to overseas life where they might find their dream job, opportunities for higher qualifications and above all greater income. As a matter of fact, rich governments are capable of taking measures such as tightening their migration plans to help poor countries prevent brain loss, yet expecting subsidies from them is not realistic intellectual at all. The way I see it, even though despite brain drain has have brought destructive detrimental issues for developing countries, it is still up to individuals to choose how they desire to build their own future. As a result of that, governments should try as much hard as they can to assure their genuine qualified people a prosperous future and prevent/keep avoid them from leaving.

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