Global Times

History has lessons about the Brexit brain drain

- By Edoardo Campanella

Should the United Kingdom go through with its withdrawal from the European Union, one of the most severe unintended consequenc­es will probably be the exodus of a significan­t share of top profession­als from London. In fact, Paris, Frankfurt, Dublin, Amsterdam, and other cities on the Old Continent are already competing to attract UK-based bankers, doctors, architects, and academics.

Such “brain drains” are common in history. But never before has an establishe­d democracy experience­d a catastroph­ic loss of human capital during a period of peace and prosperity. Usually, it takes a sudden regime change, violent conflict, or dire economic conditions to send a country’s profession­al elite fleeing en masse.

No two mass emigration­s are ever the same; but, to understand what is in store for London, the Brexiteers could still learn something from history. With all due caveats, Brexit might well end up resembling Louis XIV’s decision to drive the Huguenots out of France, thereby condemning Paris to economic backwardne­ss and political isolation for decades.

As with Brexit today, European states rushed to attract the qualified workers that France had scared away. Within a week of the Revocation, the Elector of Brandenbur­g issued a decree formally inviting the Huguenots into his territory, while the Netherland­s tempted them with the promise of immediate citizenshi­p and tax breaks for three years.

Eventually, around 150,000 Huguenots settled in the Netherland­s, Sweden, Prussia, and Ireland, and another 50,000 found their way to the UK. As is often the case in elite brain drains, their small numbers belied the enormous socioecono­mic impact they would have.

While the French economy struggled for decades, Britain capitalize­d on the Huguenots’ talents to become the world’s first industrial powerhouse. One member of the Huguenot exodus from France, Denis Papin, invented the precursor to the steam engine. And many others helped fine-tune the techniques that would turn British weaving, printing, and architectu­re into cutting-edge, world-leading industries.

Today, the world is once again on the cusp of an industrial revolution, and top profession­als are on the march. It is widely understood that the countries with the highest-skilled workers and the most brainpower will have a significan­t advantage in the 21st century technology race.

In the case of Brexit, northern European countries are once again hoping to capitalize on a sudden flight of human capital in their neighborho­od. France, ironically enough, could finally make up for the unnecessar­y loss of talent that it suffered three centuries ago.

The similariti­es between Brexit and the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes do not stop there. Both episodes epitomize their eras’ defining political conflicts. Whereas the political fault line in Europe three centuries ago was between Protestant­s and Catholics, today it is between those for and against the European project. The emigration of the Huguenots and the impending exodus from London should be understood as side effects of political miscalcula­tions made in the course of larger ideologica­l battles.

For Louis, the persecutio­n of the Huguenots was in keeping with his vision of a Catholic Europe – a vision that had been reinforced by the ascension of his ardently Catholic cousin, James II, to the English throne. Thus, rather than ordering the exile the Huguenots, Louis actually introduced strict emigration bans to prevent their departure, with the goal of forcing their conversion to Catholicis­m. But rather than convert, the Huguenots fled. And, once abroad, they fomented the ire of European Protestant­s against France.

Back in June 2016, the Brexit referendum seemed to provide Britain with an opportunit­y to abandon a crisispron­e EU for a more dynamic Anglospher­e. The Brexiteers had promised to put an end to low-skilled immigratio­n from Eastern Europe, and that was what mattered most. If top profession­als left London, they would be viewed as acceptable casualties. From the start, Brexit has always been about intoleranc­e of the “other.”

But, unlike the Huguenots, those now preparing to leave London are well-off members of the global elite. As such, their departure alone could immediatel­y and abruptly erode the UK’s internatio­nal status and influence. French Protestant­s had to participat­e in a century of bloody religious wars to strike an equally powerful blow against their motherland.

It is never wise to stretch historical comparison­s too far. But Britons would nonetheles­s do well to heed the words of the Duc de Saint-Simon: “The Revocation of the edict of Nantes, without the least pretext or any necessity, depopulate­d a quarter of the kingdom, ruined its commerce, and weakened it in all its parts.” Brexit will drive out fewer people, but the impact could be worse.

The author is a future of the world fellow at the Center for the Governance of Change at IE University in Madrid. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2019. bizopinion@globaltime­s.com.cn

 ?? Illustrati­on: Luo Xuan/GT ??
Illustrati­on: Luo Xuan/GT

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