The UKâs exit from the European Union could force universities to place a value on different academic fields when universities are looking to hire new staff.
That is the view of Anand Narasimhan, Shell professor of global leadership at IMD Business School in Lausanne, Switzerland, who suggested that Brexit would create âhuge bureaucracyâ for universities trying to bring in âskilled talentâ from the Continent and that this could lead to a more fine-grained selection process from higher education institutions because âbureaucracy may value that [individual] more or lessâ.
âItâs also going to create a problem in hiring professors [and] the skilled doctoral talent that need to become professors,â he told Times Higher Education at the Orchestrating Winning Performance conference held at IMD last month.
âItâs clear the UK has to have a view on immigration, talking about the Australian points system and so forth, but you have to create a huge bureaucracy to be able to deal with that.
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âFor the next two years, itâs not an issue because [academics] can move within the EU. But [after Brexit] youâll have to create all the paperwork to get that person in. Itâs going to be a nightmare getting skilled people into the UK because you then need to create a framework that allows that, and immediately youâll start having questions on discrimination [between fields]. âWhy are you allowing a nuclear scientist but not a nurse?â for example. [Universities] may value that more or less, we donât know.â
His comments were echoed by Arturo Bris, professor of finance and director of IMDâs World Competitiveness Center, which recently published its Global Competitiveness Ranking 2016. In the list, which assesses the competitiveness of nationsâ economies, the UK was ranked 19th. Although higher education proved one of the UKâs strengths â with six top 10 subcategory rankings including âresearchers and scientistsâ and âinbound student mobilityâ â the countryâs overall education ranking was 27.
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Professor Bris said that this reflected not the UKâs investment but rather the degree to which education âmeets the [demands of] the labour marketâ. He added that Brexit would intensify these issues.
âThe availability of talent, if it doesnât exist in the country, will be more difficult to import. [Brexit] will impose barriers,â he said. âIn Switzerland, itâs number one in our ranking because it educates the talent that the country needs â financial services, engineers.â
Professor Narasimhan, who has previously worked at London Business School and at Imperial College London, added that Brexit would also affect the labour market from a student perspective and would hinder the movement of âskilled talentâ within the EU.
âA huge amount of value is created by students outside the EU coming in, qualifying and staying on,â he said. âSo once they start essentially putting restrictions on the movement of âskilled talentâ, you will have huge problems in terms of getting the talent to come into the UK. That will become true of students from the Continent coming to the UK and UK students going to the Continent.â
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Print headline: Brexit red tape could force hard decisions
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