ParticleGrl said:
The issue isn't a lack of qualified Americans- Michio Kaku has no idea what he is talking about.
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The real lack is jobs in science.
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Kaku has done his credibility a disservice, and presented the "shortage of scientists" myth that lead me into this dead-end field.
On Googling some recent census and job stats, it appears that you're correct and that Kaku has mischaracterized the situation, as there doesn't seem to be a shortage of qualified (phds) American scientists for any particular position.
Outsourcing of high tech jobs by US employers via H-1B visas (which apparently has nothing to do with shortages of qualified US personel) seems to be advantageous to employers for economic and control reasons, and 'necessary' only insofar as it improves employers' bottom lines -- while at the same time doing harm to the higher skilled segment of the US workforce that it affects, and possibly (ironically) precipitating a trend toward decreased production of graduate science related degrees among Americans (as more prospective scientists among US born and raised become aware of the actual situation, and thus choose a different career).
The above statements, based on my cursory 'research' and assumed incomplete understanding of the situation, are tentative, and I hope that people who are somewhat more knowledgeable about this subject than me (such as you, ParticleGrl) will elaborate a bit more about it.
Kaku says that scientific research in US academia and industry is 'dependent' on foreign born scientists. I'm wondering what, exactly, he means by this because the stats I've looked at, as well as statements by you and others on the internet, suggest otherwise. On the other hand, I've been lucky enough to be acquainted with a few top scientists working in the US in the fields of biophysics and condensed matter physics who are foreign born.
Is Kaku only talking about the foreign born among the very top echelon of US scientists, and if so then what does H-1B have to do with that (and just what is the percentage of foreign born among the US scientific elite?)?
It seems that the US doesn't really need to increase its rate of American born science, technology, engineering and mathematics graduates, but rather to decrease the incentives for hiring foreign born personel (or even to establish disincentives for such hiring practices).
Have our elected representatives, while (via political expediency) advocating a solution to a problem (shortage of US born graduates in science, technology, engineering and mathematics) which apparently doesn't exist, created (via legislation) conditions under which the probability of such a problem eventually developing is increased?
Regarding the lack of jobs in science, I suspect that this would be the case even without the hiring of foreign born scientists.