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Entry curbs to harm African talent: Experts

Visa restrictions seen as threatening cross-border knowledge exchanges

By SHARON NAKOLA in Nairobi, Kenya | China Daily | Updated: 2026-02-12 09:24
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As the United States raises financial barriers to entry through new visa bonds, elevated processing fees, and changes affecting immigration pathways, young African professionals and innovators face growing hurdles to global mobility — a shift experts warned could reshape talent exchange and long-term innovation prospects across the continent.

Recent US immigration policy changes have introduced additional costs for visa applicants, including a $250 visa integrity fee applied to most nonimmigrant visa categories such as student, work and exchange visas. In addition, applicants from 38 selected countries — most in Africa — may now be required to post refundable visa bonds of up to $15,000, depending on risk assessments related to visa overstays.

Combined with rising processing costs for employment visas and tighter pathways toward permanent residency, the measures are significantly raising the financial threshold for Africans seeking study, professional training or employment opportunities in the US.

"These cumulative costs — sums that far exceed average annual incomes in many African countries — risk dampening African talent mobility, potentially deterring qualified students and professionals from pursuing US opportunities and encouraging them instead to look toward destinations with lower barriers or to invest their skills locally or regionally," said Carlos Lopes, a professor at the Nelson Mandela School of Public Governance at the University of Cape Town, in South Africa.

Lopes noted that restricted mobility could weaken cross-border collaboration and knowledge exchange at a time when African technology hubs and research institutions increasingly rely on global exposure and partnerships to grow innovation ecosystems.

He said that for many young Africans, the rising costs make international opportunities increasingly difficult to access.

"The impact of rising visa costs on African talent mobility and skills development has two implications," said Melha Rout Biel, founder and executive director of the Institute for Strategic and Policy Studies in South Sudan.

"Firstly, many African talents will not be able to pay these huge costs. Those who can afford them will be very few in number," Biel said, adding that US companies could also feel the impact as access to skilled international workers narrows.

"If we recall, the success of the United States in past years was due to liberal policies that welcomed people from all over the world. This open policy is now being threatened," he said.

He said that higher barriers could slow skill development for many African youths while simultaneously pushing countries on the continent to invest more in homegrown innovation.

"Africa should rethink by looking inward for innovation capacity and competitiveness instead of only exporting talent and technology," Biel said.

Analysts said the cost increases will hit Africa's middle class particularly hard, as many families rely on salaries to support their children's pursuit of global education and employment opportunities.

"The US visa fees will hit Africa's middle-class families harder since they rely on salaries to assist their children to accessing alternative skills and professional job opportunities abroad," said James Shikwati, founder and director of the think tank Inter Region Economic Network in Kenya.

Youthful ambition

"The fees are akin to an upfront taxation on Africa's youthful ambition to scale to the global stage," he said, warning that higher costs could limit African youths' access to US innovation ecosystems while also reducing diversity within the US workforce.

However, Shikwati noted that the shift may encourage talent development closer to home.

"It will catalyze strengthening of Africa's regional innovation and job ecosystems, leading to diversification of talent destinations — to Asia, Europe and emerging economies within Africa," he said.

He said that only young people from wealthier African families may continue to access US opportunities, further widening inequality in global mobility access.

"It is creating another front for talent multilateralism where Africans will have to scout for other options," he said.

Some analysts argued that while access to US opportunities may narrow, global demand for African talent remains strong and may simply shift elsewhere.

Olusoji Ajao, founder and executive director of Nigeria-based Afrocentric Masterclass, a company that focuses on African culture, history, and perspectives, said rising visa costs risk turning talent mobility "into a privilege rather than a merit-based pathway", locking out qualified professionals without strong financial backing.

However, he noted that Europe is emerging as a growing destination for African professionals, particularly in science and technology fields.

"I'm already seeing this through my work with European recruiters who are actively sourcing talent from Nigeria," Ajao said, noting that European efforts to strengthen domestic digital industries are increasing demand for African expertise.

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