&w=3840&q=100)
Trump's funding cuts spark global race to attract displaced US scientists
As the Trump administration cut billions of dollars in federal funding to scientific research, thousands of scientists in the US lost their jobs or grants and governments and universities around the world spotted an opportunity.
The Canada Leads programme, launched in April, hopes to foster the next generation of innovators by bringing early-career biomedical researchers north of the border.
Aix-Marseille University in France started the Safe Place for Science programme in March pledging to welcome U.S.-based scientists who may feel threatened or hindered in their research.
Australia's Global Talent Attraction Programme, announced in April, promises competitive salaries and relocation packages.
In response to what is happening in the US, said Anna-Maria Arabia, head of the Australian Academy of Sciences, we see an unparalleled opportunity to attract some of the smartest minds here.
Since World War II, the US has invested huge amounts of money in scientific research conducted at independent universities and federal agencies. That funding helped the US to become the world's leading scientific power and has led to the invention of cell phones and the internet as well as new ways to treat cancer, heart disease and strokes, noted Holden Thorp, editor-in-chief of the journal Science.
But today that system is being shaken.
Since President Donald Trump took office in January, his administration has pointed to what it calls waste and inefficiency in federal science spending and made major cuts to staff levels and grant funding at the National Academy of Sciences, the National Institutes of Health, Nasa and other agencies, as well as slashing research dollars that flow to some private universities.
The White House budget proposal for next year calls to cut the NIH budget by roughly 40 per cent and the National Science Foundation's by 55 per cent.
The Trump administration is spending its first few months reviewing the previous administration's projects, identifying waste, and realigning our research spending to match the American people's priorities and continue our innovative dominance, said White House spokesperson Kush Desai.
Already, several universities have announced hiring freezes, laid off staff or stopped admitting new graduate students. On Thursday, the Trump administration revoked Harvard University's ability to enroll international students, though a judge put that on hold.
Research institutions abroad are watching with concern for collaborations that depend on colleagues in the US but they also see opportunities to potentially poach talent.
There are threats to science ... south of the border, said Brad Wouters, of University Health Network, Canada's leading hospital and medical research centre, which launched the Canada Leads recruitment drive. There's a whole pool of talent, a whole cohort that is being affected by this moment.
Promising a safe place to do science Universities worldwide are always trying to recruit from one another, just as tech companies and businesses in other fields do. What's unusual about the current moment is that many global recruiters are targeting researchers by promising something that seems newly threatened: academic freedom.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said this month that the European Union intends to to enshrine freedom of scientific research into law. She spoke at the launch of the bloc's Choose Europe for Science which was in the works before the Trump administration cuts but has sought to capitalise on the moment.
Eric Berton, president of Aix-Marseille University, expressed a similar sentiment after launching the institution's Safe Place for Science programme.
Our American research colleagues are not particularly interested by money," he said of applicants. What they want above all is to be able to continue their research and that their academic freedom be preserved.
Too early to say 'brain drain' It's too early to say how many scientists will choose to leave the US. It will take months for universities to review applications and dole out funding, and longer for researchers to uproot their lives.
Plus, the American lead in funding research and development is enormous and even significant cuts may leave crucial programs standing. The US has been the world's leading funder of R&D including government, university and private investment for decades.
In 2023, the country funded 29 per cent of the world's R&D, according to the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
But some institutions abroad are reporting significant early interest from researchers in the US. Nearly half of the applications to Safe Place for Science 139 out of 300 total came from US-based scientists, including AI researchers and astrophysicists.
US-based applicants in this year's recruitment round for France's Institute of Genetics, Molecular and Cellular Biology roughly doubled over last year.
At the Max Planck Society in Germany, the Lise Meitner Excellence Programme aimed at young female researchers drew triple the number of applications from US-based scientists this year as last year.
Recruiters who work with companies and nonprofits say they see a similar trend.
Natalie Derry, a UK-based managing partner of the Global Emerging Sciences Practice at recruiter WittKieffer, said her team has seen a 25 per cent to 35 per cent increase in applicants from the US cold-calling about open positions. When they reach out to scientists currently based in the US, we are getting a much higher hit rate of people showing interest.
Still, there are practical hurdles to overcome for would-be continent-hoppers, she said. That can include language hurdles, arranging childcare or eldercare, and significant differences in national pension or retirement programs.
Community ties Brandon Coventry never thought he would consider a scientific career outside the United States. But federal funding cuts and questions over whether new grants will materialise have left him unsure. While reluctant to leave his family and friends, he's applied to faculty positions in Canada and France.
I've never wanted to necessarily leave the United States, but this is a serious contender for me, said Coventry, who is a postdoctoral fellow studying neural implants at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
But it's not easy to pick up and move a scientific career let alone a life.
Marianna Zhang was studying how children develop race and gender stereotypes as a postdoctoral fellow at New York University when her National Science Foundation grant was cancelled. She said it felt like America as a country was no longer interested in studying questions like mine.
Still, she wasn't sure of her next move. It's no easy solution, just fleeing and escaping to another country, she said.
The recruitment programmes range in ambition, from those trying to attract a dozen researchers to a single university to the continent-wide Choose Europe initiative.
But it's unclear if the total amount of funding and new positions offered could match what's being shed in the US.
A global vacuum Even as universities and institutes think about recruiting talent from the US, there's more apprehension than glee at the funding cuts.
Science is a global endeavour, said Patrick Cramer, head of the Max Planck Society, noting that datasets and discoveries are often shared among international collaborators.
One aim of recruitment drives is to to help prevent the loss of talent to the global scientific community, he said.
Researchers worldwide will suffer if collaborations are shut down and databases taken offline, scientists say.
The US was always an example, in both science and education, said Patrick Schultz, president of France's Institute of Genetics, Molecular and Cellular Biology. So the cuts and policies were very frightening also for us because it was an example for the whole world.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
12 minutes ago
- Time of India
Nightmare for Tesla shareholders as $150 billion wiped out in market value after Elon Musk and Donald Trump's Public fight, Big fear is: Trump is not going to play ...
Tesla shares plunged more than 14% on Thursday, wiping out $150 billion in market value, as a public spat between CEO Elon Musk and President Donald Trump intensified, raising fears of regulatory backlash against the electric vehicle maker. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now The sell-off followed a heated exchange over Trump's budget bill, which turned personal when Musk claimed Trump's election victory depended on his support. Trump retaliated on Truth Social, writing, 'The easiest way to save money in our Budget, Billions and Billions of Dollars, is to terminate Elon's Governmental Subsidies and Contracts,' hinting at targeting Musk's companies, including Tesla and SpaceX. The market's reaction was swift, with Tesla's stock drop erasing more value than the market capitalization of Starbucks or many other major U.S. companies. The decline partially reversed a surge since November, when investors poured hundreds of billions into Tesla stock, betting Trump's administration would ease regulations and support Musk's vision for autonomous 'robotaxi' services. Wedbush Securities analyst Dan Ives, a Tesla bull, expressed concern to the AP, stating, 'The whole goal of robotaxis is to have them in 20 or 25 cities next year. If you start to heighten the regulatory environment, that could delay that path.' Ives added, 'There is a fear that Trump is not going to play Mr. Nice Guy.' The feud also casts a shadow over SpaceX, Musk's privately held rocket company, which relies on billions in NASA contracts for lunar missions and International Space Station operations. SpaceX's Starlink subsidiary has recently secured deals in Saudi Arabia, Bangladesh, and elsewhere, potentially aided by Musk's ties to Trump. A recent private financing round reportedly valued SpaceX at $350 billion, up from $210 billion a year ago. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now Tesla's stock had soared post-election, gaining over $450 billion in value as investors anticipated regulatory leniency. However, Thursday's losses hit Musk personally, slashing his Tesla holdings by $20 billion in a single day, the AP reported. With Tesla's robotaxi testing set to begin in Austin, Texas, this month, investors now worry that Trump's threats could jeopardize the company's ambitious driverless car plans, critical to its future amid struggles in its core electric vehicle business.


Time of India
12 minutes ago
- Time of India
Musk vs Trump Feud: 10 ways they can destroy each other—legally
When Thomas Anderson is first unplugged from the Matrix, his body convulses. His mind rejects the truth. 'He's going into arrest,' they warn, as his world crumbles. Because when you've lived too long in an illusion, reality doesn't just disappoint—it short-circuits you. That's where Elon Musk is now. He's been yanked out of the warm, binary womb of TrumpWorld. No more bromance tweets. No more wink-wink White House briefings. No more red-carpeted corridors of power where he could whisper about AI doomsday while nudging SpaceX contracts. Just cold, hard betrayal. And now? Now he wants revenge. Here are 10 gloriously real, absurdly powerful, and completely legal ways that Trump and Musk can rip each other apart—like Neo and Agent Smith in an alley full of bad ideas. 1. Trump Pulls the Plug on Musk's Federal Billions Trump, fresh off a fiscal sobriety bender and looking for budgetary scapegoats, has a new mantra : 'No woke space toys on my dime.' He's already floated cutting $3 billion worth of contracts to Musk's empire. That's not just pruning—it's taking a chainsaw to the money tree. Tesla loses its tax credits. Starlink gets kicked out of the Pentagon's good books. SpaceX is told to sit in the corner while Blue Origin waves from the Oval Office with a smug Bezos smirk. This isn't just defunding—this is strategic neutering. 2. Musk Threatens the Republic via Rocket Blackmail Musk didn't wait to be hit first. He threatened to decommission the Dragon spacecraft —the one that ferries NASA astronauts and lunch packets to the International Space Station. The unspoken message? Nice space programme you've got there. Be a shame if something happened to it. Suddenly, space diplomacy looks more like a hostage negotiation with a Bond villain in a Twitter hoodie. 3. Trump Can Yank Elon's Security Clearance Every time Elon boasts about top-secret briefings, there's an Air Force general somewhere crying into his gin. His clearance—granted through his role in military space launches—could be revoked with one swipe of Trump's Montblanc pen. Without it, Musk becomes a liability rather than an asset. He can still launch memes, just not missiles. And without Pentagon favours, his whole 'Iron Man meets Ayn Rand' routine collapses into a Reddit thread. 4. Elon Funds a Third Party Just to Spite Him In classic Musk fashion, the Tesla tzar tweeted a poll asking if he should start a new centrist political party. It was part libertarian fantasy, part MAGA middle-finger, and 100% chaos. Over 1.8 million people voted 'Yes.' Even if it doesn't win , a Musk-backed third party could siphon off enough voters to sabotage Trump's 2028 ambitions. Think Ross Perot meets a Neuralink experiment gone rogue. 5. Trump Targets Musk's Ketamine Chronicles Bannon has demanded a drug probe into Musk's ketamine-fuelled soirées, suggesting the billionaire is 'not of sound mind.' That's ironic coming from a man who looks like he was raised on moonshine and conspiracy theories. But in TrumpWorld, personal destruction is political strategy. Imagine Musk dragged into a Senate hearing with Marjorie Taylor Greene asking, 'Were you or were you not high when naming your child X Æ A-12?' 6. Musk Unleashes Epstein Allegations Without warning, Musk lobbed a digital hand grenade: that Trump's White House deliberately delayed the release of Epstein files because his name may have been in them. He offered no evidence—just vibes and vengeance. But in a country where 30% of voters think Wayfair sells children, that's enough to spark headlines, hearings, and hashtags. When Elon says, 'Mark this post,' he's not just trolling—he's threatening to turn on the lights in a room no one wants to see. 7. Trump Ends DOGE—the Bureaucratic Crypto Baby The Department of Government Efficiency, nicknamed DOGE, was Musk's vanity project: part startup, part prank, part Silicon Valley fever dream. Its mission? Replace Washington's bureaucratic sludge with blockchain optimism and quarterly reports. Trump could axe it tomorrow and return the halls of power to their natural state: clogged, confused, and blissfully analog. No more agile government. No more 'lean federalism. ' Just 500-page PDFs printed in triplicate. 8. Elon Withholds the Final $100M Musk had pledged a total of $350 million to support Trump's 2024 run. But the final $100 million is still hanging —like a Sword of Damocles in a cryptocurrency wallet. Trump, a man who treats loyalty like a Costco membership, doesn't forgive open wallets with closed zips. This isn't just about money—it's about respect. And Musk knows just how much Trump hates being ghosted, especially by someone richer. 9. Trump Questions Musk's Citizenship The Birther playbook is back. Bannon claims Musk is an 'illegal alien.' Never mind that Elon's been a naturalised American citizen since 2002. Trump doesn't need facts—just vibes, slogans, and a red hat. Expect rallies where Trump says, 'Elon? Great guy. But I'm hearing things. People are saying.' That's how the political meat grinder starts: with an innuendo and ends with a Senate subcommittee. 10. Musk Starves MAGA's Internet Starlink, Musk's satellite internet service, powers vast swathes of rural America—aka MAGA heartland. One well-timed update and Fox Nation stops loading. Steve Bannon's podcast gets frozen mid-rant. Truth Social becomes Truth Unavailable. Musk doesn't even need to admit fault. He can just smirk and say, 'Server overload. We're working on it.' MAGA may love him, but they'll riot if they miss Tucker's rerun. Final Thought: Welcome to the Unplugged War This isn't a feud—it's a glitch in the Matrix. Two megalomaniacs, both convinced they are The One. Trump, the spiritual father of populist politics. Musk, the meme-mad prophet of techno-libertarianism. They fed each other, validated each other, needed each other. But now the code is breaking. And if The Matrix taught us anything, it's this: when reality reasserts itself, the ones who rejected it scream the loudest. Musk took the red pill. Trump wrote the damn pill into law. Now they're locked in a fight to see who can bend reality back first. Only one can emerge from the simulation. The other gets ratioed on his own app.


Hindustan Times
15 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Hours after fiery exchange with Elon Musk, Donald Trump softens tone: 'Oh, it's okay'
Hours after a fiery public exchange between US President Donald Trump and Tesla CEO Elon Musk, signs of a truce between the two of the world's most powerful men are emerging. According to POLITICO, White House aides have scheduled a call on Friday with the billionaire Tesla CEO to broker a peace. They are also attempting to convince the president to soften his public criticism of Musk to prevent any further escalation. When asked about the public exchange with one of his strongest backers, Trump told POLITICO, "Oh, it's okay.' The exchange between Trump and Musk began after the US President, in a televised Oval Office, said that he was "very disappointed" after his former aide and top donor criticised his "big, beautiful" spending bill before Congress. Also Read | Trump-Musk fallout: How it will impact the president and the tycoon 'I'm very disappointed in Elon," Donald Trump said. 'I've helped Elon a lot.' Trump also suggested the world's richest man misses being in the White House and has 'Trump derangement syndrome", according to the Associated Press. Also Read | How Donald Trump-Elon Musk tensions went from bad to worse in days: A blow-by-blow recap The two then traded insults over social media, with Musk – who was Trump's biggest campaign donor to the tune of $300 million – claiming the Republican would not have won the 2024 election without his support. Musk also, without proof, claimed that Trump was mentioned in government documents on disgraced financier and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. On the other hand, Trump suggested Musk's multibillion-dollar government contracts, including for launching rockets and for the use of the Starlink satellite service, should be terminated to save money for the federal government. Also Read | Tesla shares plummet 14% amid Elon Musk-Donald Trump feud, $153 billion lost. What's next? "The easiest way to save money in our Budget, Billions and Billions of Dollars, is to terminate Elon's Governmental Subsidies and Contracts," Trump said on Truth Social. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told AFP that Musk's Epstein tweet "is an unfortunate episode from Elon, who is unhappy with the 'One Big Beautiful Bill' because it does not include the policies he wanted."