manqiangrexue
Brigadier
I totally understand that situation. I wanted to return to China but there wasn't demand for the medical genetics skill, especially using American Illumina technology. If I forced it and went anyway, I would probably end up an underpaid work grunt competing with people willing to work 18 hours a day to please the boss pissed off that I'm there at all to steal someone's spot. In America, my life is easy as hell; the competition here sucks. So, now the labor markets say it's just stupid to go.Not justifying them, but for people that far into their careers many of them have obtained a green card or at the very least sunk at least 2 million dollars already into a house. Whatever one's political beliefs, having that much in assets does create a kind of golden handcuffs situation that they would be hesitant to part with even as dire as the situation is getting.
Other things to consider too. Even if they wish to work in Chinese AI in the future, with the release of Sora 2, the USA is still undoubtedly the place to be in AI. So I wouldn't be surprised if many of these engineers, even if they have plans to return to China, figure it'd be beneficial to obtain more expertise in America before doing so.
None of this changes current trends, where with the $100,000 H1-B fee and China's K-visa, talent will begin flowing in one direction from here on out. So as long as China can get its chips up to Nvidia's computing power, the AI sector will eventually catch up and everyone from fresh out of college grads to long time veterans in the US industry will follow suit.
However, if he had skills that China wanted, then none of that would be an obstacle for him or for me. If China wanted your skills, sell your house for whatever and go; you'll be taken care of. I don't know if that's his situation but it ain't mine unfortunately.