Prøve GULL - Gratis
The Business Cost of the Shrinking STEM Research Pipeline
MIT Sloan Management Review
|Summer 2025
As immigration barriers mount and global competition for researchers intensifies, U.S. businesses face a critical talent shortage that threatens technological competitiveness. Here's what companies need to do now.

THE UNITED STATES’ DOMINANCE in STEM research and innovation is at a critical crossroads as the country’s STEM research industry faces unprecedented erosion that will be difficult to reverse. At the heart of this challenge lies a growing crisis in human capital: the weakening pipeline of international doctoral talent that has historically powered both university research graduate programs and U.S. technological innovation. While U.S. businesses have long relied on immigrants with doctorate degrees to drive breakthroughs in fields such as artificial intelligence and pharmaceuticals, this vital talent flow is now drying up in the face of growing challenges. Global competition for top researchers is intensifying just as U.S. immigration barriers are mounting, creating a perfect storm that threatens the country’s competitive edge and the ability of U.S. businesses to remain at the cutting edge of technology. Although the drivers of this decline are primarily in the realm of public policy, swift action from the business community can help protect and strengthen this talent pipeline.
In this article, we outline five concrete steps U.S. businesses can take to protect their access to critical science, technology, engineering, and math talent. But first, it helps to understand the causes of the current decline.
Factors Affecting the STEM Talent Shortage
There are two key issues affecting U.S. universities’ access to graduate students from abroad and, in turn, industry's access to innovative ideas and R&D talent.
Denne historien er fra Summer 2025-utgaven av MIT Sloan Management Review.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review
Formalize Escalation Procedures to Improve Decision-Making
Conflict is inevitable. A systematic approach to escalation helps organizations manage disagreements efficiently and make better decisions.
11 mins
Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review
A New Method for Assessing Circular Business Cases
Conventional business analysis overlooks the costs and new revenue sources found in circular approaches.
11 mins
Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review
Building Innovation Teams Across National Borders
Restrictive immigration policies are forcing multinational enterprises to rethink their R&D strategies. Here are four approaches to maintain innovation excellence with geographically dispersed teams.
14 mins
Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review
Strategic Alignment Reconciles Purpose and Profitability
Sustained performance requires a company purpose that is validated in the market.
10 mins
Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review
The Hidden Costs of Coding With Generative Al
Generative Al can boost coding productivity, but careless deployment creates technical debt that cripples scalability and destabilizes systems.
6 mins
Fall 2025
MIT Sloan Management Review
Aligning Strategy and Skills
\"DO WE HAVE THE PEOPLE WE need to successfully execute our strategic plan?” That’s a perennial middle-of-the-night worry for business leaders.
1 mins
Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review
Should You Recruit New People, or Upskill Your Workforce?
I worry that we don't have the skills in-house that we need to seize future opportunities.
2 mins
Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review
The High Cost of Executives' Intellectual Property Blind Spots
Strategic business decisions often involve intellectual property, but senior managers' understanding of salient issues is often limited.
10 mins
Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review
How the EU's Taxonomy Combats Greenwashing
The European Union's criteria for identifying green activities can be a better guide than standard ESG measures.
7 mins
Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review
A Data-Driven Approach to Advancing Meritocracy
Instead of simply relying on best practices, employers should adopt a talent management strategy that addresses bias and inequity while ensuring efficient, fair, and merit-based decisions.
16 mins
Fall 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size