Every year, over one crore Biharis pack their bags and leave the state. Engineers go to Bangalore. Workers go to Surat. Doctors go to Delhi. Families are split across thousands of kilometres. This is not a natural phenomenon — it is the predictable result of specific, identifiable policy failures. This article names them, with data.
One crore is an almost incomprehensible number. It means that every single year, the equivalent of the entire population of Belgium — or the combined population of Delhi and Patna — leaves Bihar to find work elsewhere. This is not migration. This is a state failing its people so consistently that they vote with their feet.
Bihar produces thousands of software engineers every year — students who crack competitive examinations, attend good colleges and develop real skills. But when they graduate, there is no IT park, no tech company, no startup ecosystem in Bihar to absorb them. They have no choice but to go where the jobs are. The talent is not the problem. The opportunity is.
After Jharkhand's formation in 2000, Bihar lost access to most of its mineral wealth. But that is not an excuse — Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand have no minerals and both attract significant manufacturing investment through good governance, infrastructure and policy. Bihar has not done the same work.
No factory owner will invest in a location with 16-hour power cuts, roads that become rivers in monsoon and no reliable internet. Bihar's infrastructure has sent a consistent signal to investors for decades: do not come here. Until that signal changes, jobs will not come to Bihar.
Delhi, Bangalore, Mumbai and even Jaipur have government-backed startup incubators, venture capital networks, coworking infrastructure and angel investor communities. In Bihar, a young entrepreneur who wants to build a company has almost no ecosystem support. They move to Delhi — and their company employs people in Delhi, not Bihar.
The circular nature of brain drain is particularly vicious. Once professionals leave Bihar — build their careers, buy homes and establish roots elsewhere — there is nothing pulling them back. No career opportunity, no quality healthcare, no good schools for their children. The conditions that drove them away continue to exist, ensuring they never return.
15 min read
8 min read
10 min read
12 min read
9 min read
7 min read
Nav Bihar Morcha is building the research, community and roadmap to change Bihar's story. Join free, anonymously, from anywhere.