Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
TU Eindhoven
- Credit: TU Eindhoven. Source: Wikimedia/Lempkesfabriek
Politics
Science
Abu Dhabi
court Utrecht
education
Eindhoven
Frank Baaijens
Frank den Hollander
Maaike Kroon
Marian Thunnissen
New Scientist NL
Science Talent 2015
Top scientists
Eindhoven University of Technology
Utrecht Uiversity
Wednesday, 30 September 2015 - 18:03

Share this article:

Scientists leaving Netherlands for better wages worries university leaders

With reporting by Zack Newmark. Top scientific minds from all across the Netherlands are being drawn away by better salaries and greater funding for research grants in other countries. Frank Baaijens, Dean of the Technical University in Eindhoven, is upset over the institution's loss of one of their top scientists, Maaike Kroon, he told the Volkskrant. Named a top science talent for 2015 just last week by readers of the New Scientist NL magazine, she decided to take a job at the Abu Dhabi University. Born in 1980, Kroon became the youngest female professor in the country in 2010. Aside from the salary bump, Kroon told the newspaper that in the Netherlands her faculty's budget decreases annually while the number of students is rising. That also has a negative effect on research opportunities, she added. Aside from that, there is little possibility for professors to advance further in the Netherlands. She contrasts that with life at Abu Dhabi University, where she will also arrange the programs for doctoral candidates. She says there are many more opportunities at the ten-year-old technical university compared to her home country's offerings. Baaijen is concerned about the talent that is being pulled away from the Netherlands and is supported by mathematician Frank den Hollander of the scientific advisory board KNAW, who has said that they only have a limited ability to bind durable top talent to the Netherlands. This is becoming increasingly difficult in the face of a rapidly growing market abroad. He added that the problem was urgent enough to have to draw up a formal opinion on how to deal with the situation. Baaijens also thinks that not only higher wages but also greater scientific funding is a solution. He was supported in a statement by researcher Marian Thunnissen of Utrecht Uiversity who specialises in the University’s talent policy. Thunnissen added that laboratory conditions as well as good infrastructure and adequate research facilities are also needed. The Ministry of Education points the finger at the Dutch National Research Agenda, which determines the key topics and questions that academic research must focus on every year. A spokesman for the ministry said the Agenda must ensure that scientific challenges and opportunities are met, and that they make the Netherlands a more attractive scientific country. The retention of top scientific minds acts as magnets for universities looking to attract students and research grants, and with the international market pleasing at this stage, Dutch talent performing abroad is still a good reflection on the Dutch scientific community, the ministry spokesman added.

More like this

Image
The Atlasgebouw on the campus of the Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e or TU/Eindhoven). November 2021
Eindhoven plans 5,400 new student homes to ease housing shortage
Image
Scientists at work
Majority of scientists remain in or come back to Netherlands after time abroad
Image
A TU/Delft sign on the university's campus in front of the Aula, built in 1966. August 2019
Universities rejected hundreds of maybe risky international researchers, collaborations
Image
Clara, Petrus Camper, 1742-1745. Acquired with support from the Johan Huizinga Fund/Rijksmuseum Fund and a private donor.
Rijksmuseum acquires rare 18th-century sculpture of famed rhinoceros Clara
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Stretch your holiday pay: Bunq makes vakantiegeld last with 2.51% savings interest promo
  • British man, 21, missing since Rotterdam TwitchCon visit found dead
  • Esther Ouwehand steps down as Partij voor de Dieren leader after seven years
  • British man stabbed to death in Heerhugowaard was wanted for Amsterdam double murder
  • Dutch poet laureate Lieke Marsman dead at age 35 after lengthy fight against cancer

Top stories

  • Dutch companies imported €2 billion worth of dangerous designer drugs from India
  • Rate of birth complications higher in poorer neighborhoods
  • At least 8 Dutch men suspected of drugging, raping, filming their wives, girlfriends
  • Court rules Ye can remain in Netherlands for Arnhem performances this week
  • New A'dam coalition planning parking +tourist tax hike, free public transport for kids

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content