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Editor’s Note: It is an increasingly false impression that China’s talents are lost overseas. In fact, the gap between the number of people who returned from overseas and those going abroad is shrinking each year. An estimated 353,500 students returned to China last year, up 29.5 percent compared with 2012. Meanwhile, the growth rate for students going abroad in 2013 to study was only 3.58 percent. Based on the average rate of China’s returnees over the last 10 years, it is estimated that by 2019, for the first time in history, the number of overseas students returning to China will overtake that of Chinese students going abroad. This transition will transform China from the county with the largest outflow of students to a nation that is attracting top-notch talent at the highest rate in the world. |
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Zhu Yanmin, President of Jinjilie Overseas Education Consultants |
Sun Jianming, director of Chinese Service Center for Scholarly Exchange |
Xiong Yu, Senior Lecturer and Associate Professor at University of East Anglia |
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Data Source: Chinese Returnee Entrepreneurship Report 2013