Sharing a staggering set of data, the number of foreigners living in China is decreasing dramatically. In the past decade, the number of French people has decreased by 40%, the number of Americans has decreased by 23%, and Germany, Japan, and Italy have all decreased to varying degrees.
As the most international city in China, Shanghai still had 200,000 foreigners in 2011, and only 16 will be left in 202130,000 up. Wangjing is the largest Korean residence in Beijing. There used to be more than 100,000 Koreans living here, but now there may be only 20,000 left. Nationally, the proportion of foreign residents is only 005%。The proportion is not even as good as Laos and Cambodia, not to mention Japan and South Korea.
In fact, it is not surprising that foreigners are leaving, but what makes me strange is that the number of foreigners in developed countries has decreased significantly. Third-world countries, however, are experiencing a rapid increase in foreigners, such as Myanmar, whose population in China has increased sevenfold or eightfold in the past decade. And the number of people pouring into our country in Vietnam is already in the tens of thousands, why is it that people from the third world are frantically pouring in, while people from developed regions are quietly leaving? It is undeniable that there must be some high-end talents among the foreigners who have left. What makes people worry is whether the departure of talent is a loss to the development of the economy.
Last year, there was such a news that caused a lot of sensation, the dean of the Institute of Finance and Economics of a domestic university of finance and economics won the 2022 Nobel Prize in Economics just after being dismissed, which is undoubtedly a lost opportunity for the students of the school to communicate and learn from Nobel Prize-level masters. And what about the future? What will be the far-reaching implications of this trend if it continues?
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