Decline in International STEM Students Could Cost the US $480 Billion Each Year
This news article reports on a new study called “Brain Freeze”, which warns that the United States could lose up to $480 billion every year for the next decade because of a shrinking STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) talent poolmainly caused by the Trump administration’s restrictive policies toward international students.
🧠 What the Report Says
- The study estimates that declining international student enrolments in STEM fields will cost the US between $240 billion and $480 billion annually over the next ten years.
- That’s roughly equivalent to losing the entire economy of a US state like South Carolina or Utah every year.
📉 Why the Loss Is Happening
- The Trump administration is actively limiting international student participation in the US through:
- Threats to end Optional Practical Training (OPT) a program that allows international graduates to work in the US temporarily.
- Proposed visa time limits and new H-1B visa rules that make it harder for foreign graduates to stay and work.
- A $100,000 proposed fee for employers sponsoring H-1B visas, discouraging companies from hiring international talent.
These restrictions discourage bright international students especially in STEM fields from studying or staying in the US.
👨🎓 Importance of International Students in STEM
- Half of all STEM graduate students in the US are international.
- Nearly one-third of the US high-skill STEM workforce is foreign-born.
- For every 10 international students who don’t come, 8 fewer American students get opportunities—because universities lose tuition income that supports facilities, teaching, and scholarships.
💡 Economic & Innovation Impact
- 36% of all US patents come from international students or workers.
- International STEM graduates from US universities produce 8 patents per 100 workers, compared to 3–4 by domestic workers.
- 20% of venture-capital-backed startups in the US were founded by immigrants 75% of them first came as international students.
- Immigrant innovators don’t just create their own ideas they make American colleagues more innovative too, boosting productivity across entire industries.
💬 Key Voices
- Michael Clemens, economics professor at George Mason University and report co-author, says:
- “There is an explicit policy of this administration to exclude international students from the US.”
- The belief that international students take away university seats from Americans is a myth.
- Fanta Aw, CEO of NAFSA (Association of International Educators), said that while there are “small wins” (like exempting F-1 students from the $100,000 H-1B fee), the government’s overall stance remains hostile to international education.
🔍 Bigger Picture
- The decline of international STEM students doesn’t just hurt universities it threatens the long-term growth, innovation, and global competitiveness of the United States.
- Historically, immigrants and their children have built nearly half of Fortune 500 companies, showing their deep connection to America’s economic success.
- The report warns that without policy change, the US will face a severe innovation slowdown and lose its edge as a global leader in science and technology.
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