this post was submitted on 14 Feb 2026
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So 114 applications for one? It would be important to see the raw numbers because even 10x of 114 is miniscule.
https://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d24/tables/dt24_315.20.asp
840k full-time professors at US universities. And Europe would probably get the lower tiers because why would a tenured US professor give up their tenure to move to Europe.
So article cites 114 for one grant. Let's assume 100x that, so 11,400 professors coming over. That's a little over 1% of professors
@reabsorbthelight an average full-time professor does not cover the requirements for an advanced grants. That's why an average full-time professor doesn't get several millions of funding.
If so, that would effect the statistics and shift the effect higher. For my understanding, could you estimate the effect of the grants and the extent of the drain?
@reabsorbthelight to give estimates, we'd need to see if the increased applications lead to increased awards to US researchers (which is quite probable). One of these grants leads to about a dozen new hires, and it's very probable that senior researchers would want to pull their teams along.