Recently, I came across an interesting perspective: the massive outflow of top talent from certain regions can weaken developed markets’ greatest advantage in technological competition—the ability to attract and retain talent.



But wait, this logic doesn’t quite add up. If developed markets truly monopolize the world’s top talent, including those “chosen ones” who were nurtured with huge educational resources, then by all accounts, the gap should only continue to widen, right?

What’s even more bizarre is this: on one hand, people say emerging markets’ education systems are riddled with problems, causing a brain drain; on the other, they’re worried about being overtaken. So is the receiving side’s system flawed, or is there something wrong with the environment?

Just look at the example of India: Silicon Valley CEOs and multinational executives of Indian descent are everywhere—that’s true talent export. But what’s the result? We haven’t seen any market become invincible just because it “poached” Indian talent.

At the end of the day, it’s the same in the Web3 and crypto industry—real innovation has never been built simply by “headhunting” talent. Top talent is certainly important, but ecosystem, mechanisms, and long-term strategy are the real core competitive advantages. Talent inflow alone ≠ absolute advantage; this principle applies to any industry.
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GateUser-26d7f434vip
· 22h ago
Bro, I like your logic—it really exposes that whole "talent siphon theory." That India example is spot on. They've been attracting talent for years, but have Western markets just laid back and won? Not at all. Bottom line, the ecosystem is the real trump card, not just a simple headcount. Same goes for Web3. Tons of projects just burn money to attract big influencers, but there's no real innovation. Meanwhile, it's those small ecosystems that actually emerge. Feels good.
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token_therapistvip
· 22h ago
Nonsense, it's still an ecosystem problem; talent is just a superficial issue. India has been exporting talent for so many years, but the core innovations are still in the West. Is it really that hard to be logically consistent? This is especially obvious in Web3. No matter how many big shots there are, without a consensus mechanism, it will still collapse. Don't just focus on poaching talent.
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GateUser-beba108dvip
· 22h ago
Only by being logically consistent can you go far; just poaching people is already outdated. The ecosystem is the real key.
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RektButSmilingvip
· 22h ago
Logical consistency is exactly what writers of these articles lack the most. Talent siphoning does exist, but in the end, it's still an ecosystem issue. Relying solely on poaching talent? Impossible. Haven't there been enough painful lessons in Web3 over the past few years?
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0xLuckboxvip
· 22h ago
This logic is indeed convoluted; it feels like we're just scaring ourselves. Talent flow ≠ ecosystem collapse, this point isn't well understood. India is a good example—they turned things around through local innovation. It's the same in Web3; you can't build a moat with just capital and talent. Ecosystem development is fundamental; simply competing for talent is useless.
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