Why Are Indians More Successful Than Americans in the US

Nidhi | Oct 06, 2025, 16:43 IST
Indian origin Billionaires
( Image credit : AP )
Indian Americans, though only 1.5% of the US population, excel in education, income, technology, medicine, and academia. With 76% holding bachelor’s degrees, median household incomes over $150,000, and leadership roles in Silicon Valley and Ivy League institutions, they outperform many native-born Americans. Factors such as selective immigration policies, cultural emphasis on education, strong family support, English proficiency, and concentration in high-skill sectors explain this phenomenon. Their success highlights both America’s meritocratic opportunities and India’s global talent production, offering insights into immigration, professional achievement, and the dynamics of brain drain.
At just around 1.5% of the US population, Indian Americans are a demographic anomaly - small in size but enormous in impact. From Silicon Valley boardrooms to Ivy League lecture halls, from hospital surgery wings to Fortune 500 headquarters, Indians in America have risen to levels of success that far outpace their population share. This is not anecdotal; it is statistical, structural, and deeply cultural.

So how and why are Indian Americans outperforming many native-born Americans — and even other immigrant groups - in education, income, professional leadership, and innovation?

The Numbers That Speak for Themselves

Sundar Pichai CEO of Google
( Image credit : AP )
The scale of Indian American achievement is striking:
  • Education: 76% of Indian Americans aged 25+ hold at least a bachelor’s degree, compared with 38% of all Americans. Moreover, nearly 41% hold graduate or professional degrees, versus 13% nationally.
  • Income: Median household income for Indian Americans is $152,341, more than double the US national median of $69,000, making them the highest-earning ethnic group in the country. According to the US Census Bureau, Indian Americans are the only immigrant group with a median household income exceeding $100,000.
  • Professional Excellence: Indian Americans constitute about 9% of all physicians in the US, despite being only 1.5% of the population. Over 50,000 Indian-origin doctors practice in the US, with significant representation in specialties like cardiology, oncology, and neurosurgery.
  • Tech Entrepreneurship: Indian Americans have founded 15.5% of Silicon Valley startups, including Sun Microsystems, Hotmail, Nutanix, AppDynamics, Zscaler, and Palo Alto Networks. Sundar Pichai (Google), Satya Nadella (Microsoft), and Shantanu Narayen (Adobe) exemplify leadership at the tech industry's highest levels.
  • Academic Leadership: Indian-origin faculty number over 22,000 in US universities. Indians hold leadership roles in 70% of the top 50 US universities, including deans, department chairs, and research directors at MIT, Harvard, Stanford, and UC Berkeley.
  • Corporate Clout: Beyond tech, Indian Americans lead companies in finance, pharma, and consulting — examples include Arvind Krishna at IBM, Ajay Banga at Mastercard, and Rajiv Shah at Rockefeller Foundation.

How Did This Happen?

Immigration Policies
( Image credit : Freepik )

1. Selective Immigration Policies

The 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act eliminated race-based quotas and prioritized immigrants with educational and professional qualifications. Most Indian immigrants post-1965 were highly educated professionals, often in engineering, medicine, and IT, arriving for graduate studies or work visas like H-1B.
Fact: By 2020, over 1 million Indian immigrants were in the US on H-1B visas — the highest of any nationality.

2. Cultural Emphasis on Education

In India, academic achievement is considered a key measure of success. Families emphasize STEM fields due to employability, salary potential, and global opportunities.
Fact: In standardized tests like the SAT and GRE, Indian students consistently rank among the top-performing international cohorts. In 2022, Indian students comprised 18% of all international students in the US, second only to China.

3. Family Structure and Community Support

Indian American families often maintain multi-generational households, where parents invest heavily in children’s education. Strong community networks provide mentoring, funding, and job referrals, reinforcing upward mobility.
Fact: Organizations like the Indus Entrepreneurs (TiE) and American India Foundation (AIF) have facilitated thousands of startups and scholarships, creating a cycle of community-supported success.

4. English Language Proficiency

English fluency allows Indians to integrate seamlessly into professional and academic spheres. Most Indian higher education is conducted in English, giving immigrants a significant edge over non-English-speaking immigrant groups.

5. Focus on High-Skill, High-Impact Sectors

Indian Americans dominate in sectors that offer high pay, visibility, and leadership opportunities:
  • Technology: Indian-founded startups have raised billions in venture capital. Example: AppDynamics acquired by Cisco for $3.7 billion.
  • Medicine: Indian physicians are highly represented in top US hospitals, including Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic, and Johns Hopkins.
  • Academia: Indians lead research in AI, biotech, and engineering, with hundreds of patents registered annually in the US.

The Brain Drain Factor: What If They Had Stayed in India?

Brain Drain
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Had these high-performing Indian professionals remained in India, they could have accelerated development in:

  • Higher Education: More world-class universities and research programs.
  • Startup Ecosystem: Increased venture funding and innovation-driven entrepreneurship.
  • Healthcare: Improved doctor-to-patient ratios and research-driven treatment protocols.
  • Global Innovation Rankings: India’s contributions to R&D and patents could have been significantly higher.
Fact: India ranks 48th in the Global Innovation Index 2023, while countries with higher talent retention rank in the top 10. Brain drain has historically been a factor in this discrepancy.

However, bureaucracy, limited infrastructure, and political interference often constrained opportunities for leadership and innovation. Reverse brain drain trends now see Indian Americans investing billions in India, founding startups, advising policy, and even returning permanently.

Success Beyond Borders

The Indian American story is not just about individual ambition; it is a blueprint for what happens when talent meets opportunity. It reflects:
  • America: Its ability to absorb and elevate skilled immigrants.
  • India: Its capacity to produce world-class human capital despite systemic constraints.
As India grows and reforms, one can imagine a future where more talent chooses to stay or return, further fueling the nation’s development.

The Indian success story in the US is proof that excellence, education, and opportunity — when combined — can transcend borders.

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