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Brain Waste among Highly Skilled Immigrants in the United States: A Persistent Problem with Increasing Costs
Webinar
June 24, 2021

MPI Webinar

Brain Waste among Highly Skilled Immigrants in the United States: A Persistent Problem with Increasing Costs

Multimedia Tabs

Video

Speakers: 

David Dyssegaard Kallick, Deputy Director and Director of Immigration Research, Fiscal Policy Institute 

Jina Krause-Vilmar, President and CEO, Upwardly Global

Mohamed Khalif, President, Washington Academy for International Medical Graduates

Shaun E. Smith, Senior Vice President and Chief Human Resources Officer, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital

Moderator: 

Jeanne Batalova, Senior Policy Analyst; Manager, Migration Data Hub, Migration Policy Institute (MPI)

Two million college-educated immigrants in the United States are either unemployed or working in jobs that require no more than a high school diploma, often because of licensing, credential-recognition, and other barriers. While most states have seen their populations of highly skilled immigrants grow since 2010, there have been few strategic efforts to improve the integration prospects of these new residents or address this skill underutilization, also referred to as “brain waste.” The failure to fully leverage this human capital comes with increasing costs, with job vacancies at a two-decade high, an aging society, and a rapidly transforming labor market.

During this webcast, experts discuss findings from a report examining at U.S. and state levels the underemployment of college graduates by nativity and by race and ethnicity, in the process revealing patterns of economic inequality. The conversation includes immigrant and employer voices who explore the promising strategies that exist to mitigate this brain waste for the benefit of the U.S. economy, local communities, and the workers themselves.

Registration deadline for this event has passed.