Why India’s Top Minds Trust America and Canada More Than India - Even Today
Nidhi | Nov 27, 2025, 11:01 IST
Indian' American
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India is growing into a global economic power, yet its brightest students, professionals and entrepreneurs continue to move to the United States and Canada at record levels. This article explores the real reasons behind this ongoing talent exodus. Using verified data, global reports and real life cases, it examines research infrastructure, merit based growth, quality of life, education pathways, startup ecosystems, stability and long term opportunities abroad. The piece explains why, even today, many top Indian minds trust foreign countries more than their own.
India is projected to become the fourth largest economy by 2027 according to the IMF. It is one of the fastest growing major economies and home to the third largest startup ecosystem in the world. Yet, despite this rapid rise, India continues to be the largest source of high skill migrants for both the United States and Canada.
This is not a shallow observation. It is backed by data.
The United States Citizenship and Immigration Services reported that three out of every four H-1B visas in 2023 went to Indians, the highest proportion in history. Canada’s immigration department confirmed that Indians made up over forty one percent of all new permanent residents in 2023, again a record.
If India is growing, why do its brightest still trust the West more. The answer lies in evidence rather than emotion.
India spends less than 0.7 percent of its GDP on research and development according to the UNESCO Institute for Statistics. The global average is above 1.8 percent.
By comparison:
The Nature Index shows that over sixty percent of high impact scientific papers by Indian origin scholars are published while they are working abroad, not in India.
Large scale projects like the James Webb Telescope, DeepMind’s AI programs or advanced biomedical research platforms simply do not exist at equivalent scale in India. For serious researchers, the West is the only place where their work can reach global standards. Canadian immigration is built on a points based system that rewards education, age, experience and language ability.
The United States tech industry hires purely on skill, portfolios and interview performance, not seniority.
Multiple global surveys consistently reflect this belief:
This is not an emotional claim. It is documented across global indices.
This is one of the strongest data points.
According to the Henley and Partners Wealth Migration Report 2024:
The data is large and clear.
Reports show:
This is a structural advantage that India cannot match immediately.
Stanford’s AI Index 2024 reports:
They did not leave for lifestyle. They left for capital, research and global scale. A 2023 Deloitte global mobility study states that Indian skilled workers prioritise:
Countries like Canada, which score high on the World Bank Governance Indicators, attract Indian professionals who want predictable environments for families, investments and careers.
India’s growth is real, but unpredictable bureaucratic processes, abrupt policy shifts and uneven public infrastructure create uncertainty. Beyond economics, parents consistently cite:
For many Indian families, migration is not a personal decision. It is a long term investment in their children.
This is not a shallow observation. It is backed by data.
The United States Citizenship and Immigration Services reported that three out of every four H-1B visas in 2023 went to Indians, the highest proportion in history. Canada’s immigration department confirmed that Indians made up over forty one percent of all new permanent residents in 2023, again a record.
If India is growing, why do its brightest still trust the West more. The answer lies in evidence rather than emotion.
1. The United States and Canada offer far superior research funding and scientific infrastructure
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By comparison:
- The United States invests over 3 percent of GDP in R and D.
- Canada invests close to 1.7 percent.
- Per researcher spending in the United States is nearly four times higher than Indian labs, as reported by Brookings.
The Nature Index shows that over sixty percent of high impact scientific papers by Indian origin scholars are published while they are working abroad, not in India.
Large scale projects like the James Webb Telescope, DeepMind’s AI programs or advanced biomedical research platforms simply do not exist at equivalent scale in India. For serious researchers, the West is the only place where their work can reach global standards.
2. Meritocracy is more measurable, transparent and faster abroad
The United States tech industry hires purely on skill, portfolios and interview performance, not seniority.
Multiple global surveys consistently reflect this belief:
- A 2024 Oxford Migration Observatory study showed that Indian professionals ranked the United States and Canada highest for predictability of career progression.
- A Deloitte workforce study found that Indian employees report faster promotions abroad and lower levels of internal bias.
3. The quality of everyday life abroad is statistically higher for educated professionals
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- In the IQAir 2023 report, India had 14 of the world’s 20 most polluted cities.
- The World Bank’s logistics index shows India ranking 44th, while the United States is at 17th and Canada at 7th.
- Numbeo’s Quality of Life Index consistently places Canada in the top 15, the United States in the top 20, and India below rank 50.
- shorter commutes
- low crime rates
- better urban planning
- reliable public infrastructure
- cleaner air
- access to public healthcare
4. India is experiencing the world’s third highest outflow of millionaires
India stands committed to promote legal pathways of migration: MEA
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According to the Henley and Partners Wealth Migration Report 2024:
- India recorded a net loss of 6,500 high net worth individuals in one year.
- Only China and the United Kingdom lost more wealthy individuals.
- India has consistently remained in the top three countries with millionaire outflow for five consecutive years.
- simpler tax policies abroad
- safer environments
- better lifestyle for children
- political stability
- easier global mobility
5. Indian students believe foreign education provides stronger economic returns
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- Over 320,000 Indian students studied in the United States in 2023.
- Canada issued 226,000 study permits to Indian students in one year.
- Indian students contributed over 20 billion Canadian dollars to Canada’s economy, according to the Canadian Bureau for International Education.
Reports show:
- Higher research opportunities at foreign universities
- Clearer pathways to work permits and permanent residency
- More industry connected programs
- Better global networking
6. The global tech and AI industry is concentrated in North America
OpenAI and Taiwan's Foxconn to partner in AI hardware design and manufacturing in the US
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Stanford’s AI Index 2024 reports:
- Over seventy percent of top tier AI jobs are located in the United States and Canada.
- The United States receives almost half of global venture capital funding for tech startups.
- Silicon Valley alone invests more money in early stage startups than the entire Indian VC ecosystem combined.
They did not leave for lifestyle. They left for capital, research and global scale.
7. Stability of law, public services and regulations shapes long term trust
- clarity of tax rules
- predictability of government policy
- low corruption
- safety
- strong public institutions
Countries like Canada, which score high on the World Bank Governance Indicators, attract Indian professionals who want predictable environments for families, investments and careers.
India’s growth is real, but unpredictable bureaucratic processes, abrupt policy shifts and uneven public infrastructure create uncertainty.
8. The next generation is a major reason families migrate
- reduced academic pressure
- better mental health support
- more exposure to global thinking
- cleaner environment
- safer public spaces
- flexibility in education
For many Indian families, migration is not a personal decision. It is a long term investment in their children.