Young Indians say “no thanks” to American dream

BANGALORE, (Reuters) – For decades, the United  States beckoned as the land of opportunity for bright, young  Indians, lured by the prospect of prestigious university  degrees followed by jobs on Wall Street or in Silicon Valley.

Indians have since 2001 been the largest foreign student  population on American campuses, comprising around 15 percent  of all international students at colleges and universities in  the United States, according to the U.S. Embassy in New Delhi.

But now, the economic crisis that has sent the U.S. economy  into its worst recession in decades, has tarnished the sheen of  the ‘American Dream’ for many Indians who are opting for  university studies and career opportunities at home.

America’s loss may be India’s gain, analysts say, pointing  to a ‘reverse brain drain’ that may see India reaping benefits  for years to come as some of its smartest and most talented  people put their energies into India’ economy, Asia’s  third-largest.   “The brain drain has already begun to reverse. Now there are  many magnets pulling the best talent. Before, the U.S. was  where everyone wanted to go,” said Vivek Wadhwa, a U.S.-based  Indian academic who has written a paper on the issue. India’s  economy has boomed at around 9 percent growth in each of the  last three years, lifting millions out of poverty and creating  a generation of affluent and ambitious young Indians.

Many have pursued prestigious post-graduate degrees in the  U.S. and Europe and then stayed after finding high-paying jobs.

But as the global financial crisis has kicked-in, Indians  are seeing greater opportunities at home, where there are more  job openings, the cost of living is lower and modern amenities  such as shopping malls and condominiums offer them a  comfortable life.

About 100,000 skilled Indian ‘returnees’ will come home  from the United States in the next five years, Wadhwa  estimated.

“When I joined Duke four years ago, nearly every student  talked about wanting to stay and work in the U.S.,” said  Wadhwa, an adjunct professor at Duke University and a senior  research associate at Harvard Law School.

“Now the vast majority plan to go back home. A few want to  work here to pay off their loans, but they don’t think they  will be able to get jobs.”

With U.S. unemployment at a 26 year high, prospects at home  appear better for Indian graduates as firms such as Warner Bros  and IBM announce they will move jobs to India and other  outsourcing hubs after laying off workers in North America.

FINANCIAL AID

Rahul Dutta, 23, is a case in point. He has changed his  plans to study in the United States and is now enrolled at a  local university.

“My initial plan was to do my master’s degree there and  look for a job too, but now I realise that there are no jobs  and no funding, so I took admission in a college in Delhi,”  said Dutta.

In Bangalore, south India’s high-tech metropolis, Kripa  Chettiar reached the same conclusion.

“I was looking at doing a master’s in financial engineering  at Columbia University,” Chettiar said. “But now I am not even  writing the GRE because now there’s no point, as there is no  financial aid available at all.”

The GRE, or Graduate Record Examination, is the standard  admission test for graduate university studies in the United  States and several other English-speaking countries.

Garvit Bafna in Pune, a city near India’s financial capital  Mumbai, took the exam, but he says he will only move to America  if he gets into a top-ranked university.

Even students who have passed the GRE exam are abandoning  plans to study abroad due to lack of funds, said Rajiv Ganjoo,  head of international education at Career Launcher, an  educational service provider in India.

“It is a waiting game now,” Ganjoo said. “Students are  looking at the recession, at how the colleges react to it and  how the government reacts to it, before taking any steps.”

For students already in the United States, getting  fellowships and other funding is becoming difficult, especially  for foreigners as the pool of scholarship dollars has dried up  due to shrinking university endowments from stock market  losses.

“The funding scenario is grim as compared to past years,”  said Cherry Harika, a 24-year-old from India’s Punjab province  who is studying for a masters degree at Boston University.

“My university has frozen new hiring. There are hardly any  new job openings for foreigners, especially when U.S. citizens  are losing their jobs.”

Employer visa sponsorships are growing scarcer and  President Barack Obama’s administration is under pressure to  restrict the number of temporary work permits issued to  foreigners.

About 55,000 students in India took the GRE last year, down  more than 20 percent from the year before, said Jaideep  Chowdhary, who heads the GRE programme at a private training  institute in India.

Most students who study in the United States need to shell  out around $50,000 for a two-year stay, he said.

Much of that money would come from loans which are not easy  to get these days due to the credit crunch, especially for  students with no reasonable assurance of a job.