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Sunday, May 31, 2026

More and more qualified people are moving from poor to rich countries to fill vacancies in specialist areas like engineering, computing and medicine. Some people believe that by encouraging the movement of such people, rich countries are stealing from poor countries. Others feel that this is only part of the natural movement of workers around the world. Discuss and give your opinion

More and more qualified people are moving from poor to rich countries to fill vacancies in specialist areas like engineering, computing and medicine. Some people believe that by encouraging the movement of such people, rich countries are stealing from poor countries. Others feel that this is only part of the natural movement of workers around the world. Discuss and  give your opinion 

Today, a growing number of highly qualified professionals from developing countries have been migrating to wealthier nations. While some argue that this trend amounts to exploiting destitute societies, others believe it reflects the natural movement of labour in a globalised world. In my opinion, although developed nations actively attract skilled workers, this migration is ultimately a normal and unavoidable global phenomenon.

Those who view this issue as exploitation allege that wealthy countries deliberately design policies to attract talent from abroad. They offer competitive salaries, comprehensive healthcare benefits, and improved living conditions to skilled professionals. Corporations and governments often create immigration pathways specifically targeting doctors, engineers, and IT specialists. Apart from that, prospective immigrants are also allowed to bring their families along and allow them access permanent residence, and then citizenship through the naturalization process, an offer too tempting to be overlooked. As a result, individuals from impoverished regions are drawn by financial security, career advancement and a stable family life.  

On the other hand, many debunk the former view and believe this movement is a natural consequence of economic disparity and global interconnectedness. Everyone enjoys the fundamental right to seek better opportunities and improve their standard of living, and extend themselves and their kin better facilities and future prospects. Ever since humans appeared on this planet, they have migrated and relocated to places which boast of affording surfeit opportunities for better living conditions, and this ritual has continued into the modern times, and thus, there is nothing alarming about this pattern.    

In conclusion, although it may seem that affluent nations actively encourage skilled migration through attractive incentives and rob their destitute counterparts of their invaluable talent, this process profoundly reflects individual choice and global economic reality and is inevitable.