Tomorrow's Scientists: How is the global talent pool changing?

 The World Economic Forum reported that #China had 4.7 million recent STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) graduates in 2016. #India, another academic powerhouse, had 2.6 million new #STEM graduates while the U.S. had 568,000. Chinese STEM graduates outnumber US STEM grads 8.2 to 1.

The gap is going to become even wider. Even modest predictions see the number of 25 to 34-year-old graduates in China rising by a further 300% by 2030, compared with an increase of around 30% expected in #Europe and the #UnitedStates.


By 2030, China and India could account for more than 60% of the STEM graduates in major economies, compared with only 8% in Europe and 4% in the United States.


China has been building the equivalent of almost one university per week.


For decades, the United States had the highest proportion of people going to university and dominated the graduate market.





https://lnkd.in/enMe9zMw

 from the "Human Capital Report 2016" by WEF




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