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June 18th, 2007
Richard Springer
India West, News Report
The wave of immigrants who energized the high tech sector from 1995 to
2005 were well-educated and came to the United States mainly for
further education and employment, not to launch new start-ups,
according to a recently-released study.
Also, among Indian American entrepreneurs during the decade, graduates
of the famous Indian Institutes of Technology played a less dominant
role than previous media reports have implied.
These are two of the more surprising findings in a new report,
"Education, Entrepreneurship and Education," issued June 11 by the
Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, the Pratt School of Engineering at
Duke University, and the School of Information at the University of
California at Berkeley.
The survey was a follow-up to a January 2007 report, "New Immigrant
Entrepreneurs," which found that in 25.3 percent of technology and
engineering companies started in the U.S. from 1995-2005, at least one
key founder was foreign-born and 26 percent of those immigrant-launched
firms had an Indian co-founder (I-W, Jan. 5).
In a teleconference with reporters June 11, lead co-author of both
reports, Vivek Wadhwa, executive in residence at the Pratt School, said
he was not surprised that the Indian and Chinese entrepreneurs were so
well educated, but the "extent" of their education was an eye-opener.
Of the 144 company founders surveyed (including 87 Indians and the rest
from China and Taiwan), 96 percent held bachelor's degrees and 74
percent held graduate or postgraduate degrees, including 26.8 percent
with Ph.D.s and 47.2 percent with master's degrees.
About 52.3 percent of the immigrant founders initially came to the U.S.
for higher education, 39.8 percent for job opportunities, 5.5 percent
for family reasons and only 1.6 percent to start a business.
More than 53 percent of immigrant founders of tech and engineering
firms completed their highest degrees in U.S. universities and about 72
percent of these degrees were in three fields: engineering (43.5
percent), computer science/information technology (18.5 percent) and
applied sciences (10 percent).
"The U.S. economy depends on these high rates of entrepreneurship and
innovation to maintain its global edge," Wadhwa said in a statement.
"Our higher education system has historically attracted talented
immigrants from around the world to the United States to study. We now
face a choice - to encourage more Americans to complete higher degrees
in these fields, or to encourage foreign students to stay in the United
States after completing their degrees. We need to do both."
Of the Indian American founders, 91.3 percent completed their
undergraduate degree in India, but only 15 percent at one of the seven
IITs. "No single university stood out," Wadhwa said, adding that both
Delhi University and IIT-Bombay accounted for seven percent each (see
Figure 1).
Since a BusinessWeek article and a "60 Minutes" profile some years ago
highlighted the accomplishments of graduates of the IITs, it has been
thought that they played the primary role in the Indian American
contribution to the tech boom. This report may lessen that perception.
Wadhwa, founder and former chief executive officer of Relativity
Technologies in Raleigh, N.C., joked to reporters that he might have to
endure the wrath of some IIT grads because of the finding.
The study also determined that immigrant entrepreneurs tend to move to
cosmopolitan areas, and regions with the largest immigrant population
also tend to have the greatest number of technology startups.
About 31 percent of the engineering and technology companies founded
from 1995-2005 in the 11 technology centers surveyed had an immigrant
as a key founder. This compares to a national average of 25.3 percent.
Robert Litan, vice president of research and policy at the Kansas City,
Mo.-based Kauffman Foundation, told reporters that the study argues the
U.S. immigration policy "should be more liberal in accepting more
high-skilled immigrants as well as allowing those who want to upgrade
their skills" to do so.
Wadhwa pointed out that many of the more recent group of immigrant
founders must wait six to 10 years, or even longer, to get their green
cards.
Faced with such delays, "they might as well go back to Delhi and Bangalore" to start up their companies, he added.
Immigration law needs to be changed to help persuade foreign-born entrepreneurs to remain in the U.S., Wadhwa insisted.
link: http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=caa4423e2757eae11807dcd9c0befe0f&from=rss
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