Malaysia faces brain drain in biotech

Published November 14, 2006

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia is counting on bright, ambitious people like Tan Chye Ling for its future, to lead it away from manufacturing and into the knowledge age. But the 32-year-old scientist, a post-graduate in molecular biology, is not counting on Malaysia to look after her future.

“I felt very suppressed in Malaysia,” said Tan, who moved to neighbouring Singapore, the region's pace-setter for biotech investment, after a decade of study and research in Malaysia.

“I have benefited from the better research environment and salary scheme here. Things are much smoother,” she said by phone from the National University of Singapore where she is studying dust mites and allergies.

Tan estimates that 60 per cent of the research teams she works with in Singapore are from Malaysia, despite her country's efforts over several years to develop a biotech industry.

The Malaysian government unveiled plans last March to spend $553.3 million over five years to boost research, attract foreign investment and build new facilities. But its efforts are wasted unless it can retain more talented people like Tan.

The biotech campaign is not new -- Malaysia has tried various schemes over the past five years with little success -- but its efforts have taken on a new urgency after UN data showed an 11 per cent fall in direct foreign investment between 2004 and 2005 in Malaysia.

But critics say Malaysia's strategy misses the point: the country needs more bright, young scientists rather than more state-of-the-art laboratories.

“Some of our research centres are already as high-tech as the ones in the United Kingdom and Australia,” said Ruslan Abdullah, a molecular biologist who heads research in a private firm.

Researcher Tan adds one more request: raise salaries.

A post-doctoral fellow in Singapore earns up to $3,210 a month, nearly five times the salary paid in Malaysia, she said.

“With the increasing cost of living, it is not fair to expect post-doctoral fellows to teach and do research on 2,500 ringgit ($685),” said Tan, who moved to Singapore more than a year ago. Malaysia recently increased funds for postgraduate research schemes five-fold to $180 million under its five-year plan.

But this is a tiny fraction of the $8 billion Singapore is investing in biotech R&D and biomedical firms over the next five years, including $3.4 billion in life-sciences research alone.—Reuters

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