Pakistan
‘Brain gain’ claim rings hollow as Pakistan loses doctors, engineers and accountants in record exodus
Pakistan is witnessing an unprecedented outflow of skilled professionals even as its military leadership frames the trend as a strategic advantage rather than a national setback.
Despite official assertions of “brain gain,” fresh data shows that thousands of highly qualified Pakistanis have exited the country over the past two years, driven by deepening economic stress, political uncertainty and shrinking professional opportunities.
In April 2025, Chief of Defence Staff Asim Munir addressed the inaugural Overseas Pakistanis’ Convention, describing expatriate citizens as a source of “brain gain” instead of “brain drain.”
Munir argued that Pakistanis working abroad serve as informal ambassadors, strengthening the country’s global footprint.
However, emigration figures released by the Bureau of Emigration and Overseas Employment present a sharply contrasting picture.
Between 2024 and 2025 alone, nearly 5,000 doctors, 11,000 engineers and over 13,000 accountants officially left Pakistan in search of overseas employment.
The healthcare sector has borne the brunt of this migration, with nurse emigration surging by an extraordinary 2,144 percent between 2011 and 2024, raising serious concerns about the sustainability of domestic medical services.
The scale of the outflow has prompted Pakistan’s Express Tribune to describe 2025 as a defining moment, labelling the country a “Brain Drain Economy” increasingly dependent on exporting its skilled workforce rather than retaining talent to rebuild its institutions.
The report warned that the mass departure of professionals has become a structural feature of Pakistan’s economy rather than a temporary phase.
Political voices have also weighed in on the growing crisis.
Former senator Mustafa Nawaz Khokhar amplified the Tribune report, arguing that Pakistan’s economic deterioration cannot be reversed without political reform.
He pointed to the country’s paradoxical position as the world’s fourth-largest freelancing hub, yet suffering estimated losses of $1.62 billion due to repeated internet shutdowns.
According to him, these disruptions have placed nearly 2.37 million freelance jobs at risk.
Official registration data further underlines the scale of migration.
In 2024, more than 7,27,000 Pakistanis registered to work abroad. The following year saw another 6,87,246 registrations, with a significant proportion classified as highly qualified, highly skilled and skilled workers.
Social media users have increasingly questioned how such figures align with the military leadership’s “brain gain” narrative.
Opposition figures have been even more blunt.
PTI leader Sajid Sikandar Ali described Pakistan’s talent exodus as inevitable in the absence of industrial growth, research funding and employment opportunities.
He noted that highly educated professionals often return to shuttered laboratories and closed markets, leaving them little choice but to seek livelihoods elsewhere.
As Pakistan heads into 2026, the contradiction between official rhetoric and ground reality continues to sharpen.
While leaders highlight overseas Pakistanis as a strategic asset, the sustained loss of doctors, engineers and technical professionals suggests a nation struggling to retain the very human capital it needs for long-term recovery.
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