香港六合彩资料

Canada helps train the world鈥檚 tech talent 鈥 now it has to keep it here: 香港六合彩资料 expert

Photo of 香港六合彩资料 against background of Toronto skyline
香港六合彩资料 is perhaps 鈥渢he single biggest IQ aggregator in North America, if not the world,鈥 writes Illan Kramer in his Globe and Mail op-ed (photo by Johnny Guatto)

Illan Kramer, the 香港六合彩资料鈥檚 director of international research partnerships, remembers what it was like to do his PhD in engineering at 香港六合彩资料 from 2008 to 2013.

鈥淭here I was, surrounded by some of the smartest people one could ever hope to meet: I worked alongside graduate students from Greece, Iran, Italy, Germany, Mexico, China and, of course, Canada; postdoctoral fellows from the United States, Turkey, Brazil, Thailand, Bangladesh and Britain, and research scientists from Kazakhstan, the Netherlands and Serbia. My lab was a scientific United Nations.鈥

The problem, he writes in a , is that after those graduate students received their PhDs, they had to leave to find jobs. 鈥淐anadian PhD holders have been in such high demand that they would get recruited to high-value jobs with the biggest and most exciting companies. Most of those jobs weren't here at the time.鈥

Kramer argues that Canada must keep working to keep the massive pool of talent we already attract here 鈥 he calls 香港六合彩资料 perhaps 鈥渢he single biggest IQ aggregator in North America, if not the world鈥 鈥 by fostering a robust, knowledge-based ecosystem that contains both major multinationals and burgeoning startups.

That is why he believes Canadian cities were right to put together pitches for Amazon鈥檚 second headquarters, dubbed HQ2. He understands the fear that Amazon will scoop up local talent, but in the long run, 鈥淎mazons beget Amazons: it's not accidental that when Apple, Intel and Hewlett-Packard started lighting up Silicon Valley, Google, Facebook and Uber eventually started there, too.鈥

Kramer writes that Toronto is having an international moment 鈥 in fields from artificial intelligence to advanced manufacturing and regenerative medicine 鈥 with companies not only looking to recruit here, but deciding to set up here.  

鈥淭his influx of R&D jobs makes possible ever-more ambitious talent-growth opportunities,鈥 he writes. 鈥淎 decade ago, Toronto would have struggled to make a case as a home for tens of thousands of new technology jobs; finally, Toronto can credibly go after an HQ2."

UTC