Abstract The phenomenon of brain drain has remained a persistent development concern for India, particularly in the context of increasing global demand for skilled labour. This study examines recent trends in outward migration from India and evaluates their implications for national development using a time-series analytical framework. Relying on secondary data sourced from official government publications for the period 2020–2024, the study employs a simple time-trend regression model to test whether outward migration has increased significantly over time. The empirical results reveal a strong and statistically significant upward trend in migration, leading to the rejection of the null hypothesis of no increase in outward migration. The findings indicate that brain drain in India has intensified in the post-pandemic period, reflecting structural push and pull factors rather than short-term fluctuations. While the growing outflow of skilled human capital raises concerns regarding domestic skill shortages, productivity, and returns on public investment in education, the study also recognises the offsetting role of remittances and diaspora engagement in supporting economic stability. The paper concludes that brain drain in India represents a complex development challenge that requires policy responses aimed at promoting skill retention, return migration, and effective utilisation of diaspora networks to transform brain drain into brain circulation.
Ningoji et al. (Sat,) studied this question.