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The writer is founder and director of the New Britain Project think-tank
Of all the tremors unleashed by Donald Trump’s second term, one of the most quietly consequential is a reordering of the global innovation economy. Top talent is fleeing the US or seriously considering it.
This isn’t a story confined to university campuses. Tech workers are questioning whether a culture increasingly shaped by Elon Musk-style libertarianism reflects their values; scientists are watching research budgets freeze and vaccine scepticism rise. And green entrepreneurs are seeing climate denial return to the US political mainstream. These are the people driving the next industrial era. And for the first time in decades, the US is no longer their automatic destination.
To seize the opportunity presented by America’s brain drain, the UK government must ease the path for the right talent to come in while still keeping overall migration figures down. And it must do so quickly.
It’s a race — not just for prestige, but for growth and security. France and Germany are leading the charge, but they’re not alone. The nations that succeed in attracting the best minds will gain a decisive edge in the AI, biotech and energy sectors, which will drive 21st-century power.
Emmanuel Macron understands this. France’s €109bn sovereign AI package, with fast-track visas attached, is more than a tech plan; it’s a geopolitical play. Germany is preparing to recruit 1,000 international scientists. The EU has launched a €500mn “Choose Europe for Science” programme and doubled relocation support.
The UK, until recently, was barely at the starting line. That changed at London Tech Week earlier this month. Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s pledge of £1bn to expand Britain’s computing power, which is vital for training advanced AI models, was accomplished through 100 new AI scholarships and a package of reforms to boost digital education. His aim to “make Britain an AI-maker, not just an AI-taker” was a clear signal that Britain wants to compete.
That shift continued this week with the launch of a global talent drive, dedicated talent task force and a new £54mn fund to cover the full visa and relocation costs for world-leading researchers. These moves show the government knows what’s at stake.
But Starmer must do more. The UK’s high-skilled visa system remains a barrier, not a lever: it is expensive, slow, and misaligned with national priorities. It suggests talent is a risk to manage, not an asset to unleash.
And in some ways that’s no surprise. The migration debate is politically toxic. The government is under immense pressure, and rightly so, to get mass migration down, making it difficult to argue that for some people it must become easier, faster and cheaper to come in.
Yet public attitudes are more nuanced than they seem. Voters are consistently more supportive of high-skilled immigration when it is clearly tied to national goals like growth and innovation.
That’s why an invitation-only visa model offers a compelling way forward. It would be selective by design, with the UK identifying priority sectors and proactively inviting top talent to apply. It’s faster, harder to criticise and easier to explain. It takes back control.
Other countries are doing this already. Australia’s National Innovation Visa is built on exactly this logic; it is tied directly to strategic sectors, with lower costs and little red tape. If the UK is serious about growth, we need a version that works for us.
This isn’t just about visas. It goes to the heart of Starmer’s defining mission: growth. Britain aims to lead in AI, biotech and clean energy. That takes talent — not in principle, but in practice. People need to choose to live, work and build here over everywhere else.