Why Not Jamaica?
If Jamaicans can build successful careers, companies and innovations across the world, what is stopping more of that talent, investment and ambition from helping to build the future at home?

Christopher Brown’s recent contribution to the Sectoral Debate was ostensibly about innovation, patents, artificial intelligence and technology. Yet beneath the statistics and political exchanges lies a much larger question about the future shape of Jamaica itself.
The Opposition spokesman on science, technology and digital transformation pointed to a series of troubling indicators. Citing the World Intellectual Property Organization’s Global Innovation Index, Brown noted that Jamaica fell from 72nd place in 2020 to 83rd in 2025. He highlighted weak rankings in knowledge output and network readiness and lamented the fact that Jamaican inventors filed just two patents in 2023. He also drew attention to the continued migration of highly educated Jamaicans and warned that artificial intelligence systems are increasingly being trained on Jamaican music, language, culture and creative expression, often without meaningful compensation or protection for the people who created them.
Whether one agrees with every aspect of Brown’s analysis is not the most important question. What matters is that his comments force Jamaica to confront an uncomfortable reality. In an increasingly competitive world, talent alone is not enough. Countries succeed when they build systems capable of turning talent into opportunity, innovation into enterprise and creativity into lasting economic value.
Jamaica has never struggled to produce exceptional people.
For a nation of fewer than three million citizens, its global influence is extraordinary. Jamaican athletes have dominated the world’s biggest stages. Jamaican musicians have shaped international culture for generations. Jamaican professionals can be found in hospitals, universities, boardrooms and technology firms across North America, Europe and beyond. Few countries of Jamaica’s size have produced such an outsized impact on the world.
The challenge has never been talent.
The challenge has been creating enough pathways for that talent to build prosperity at home.
For decades, discussions about development have often returned to the issue of brain drain. The phrase itself suggests a country losing something valuable. Nurses leave. Engineers leave. Teachers leave. Technology professionals leave. The assumption has long been that these departures represent a permanent loss and that Jamaica’s future depends largely on persuading people to stay.
History suggests otherwise.
The countries that have successfully transformed their economies rarely did so by convincing their brightest citizens not to leave. Instead, they became places people wanted to return to. Opportunity changed the equation. As economies strengthened, investment increased, industries expanded and talented people who had built careers abroad began to see a future back home.
The lesson is simple. People do not usually relocate their lives because of patriotic slogans. They relocate because opportunity exists.
That is why Brown’s remarks deserve attention beyond politics. They touch on a question that sits at the heart of Jamaica’s economic future. Is Jamaica becoming a place that attracts talent or one that exports it?
The answer matters far beyond the technology sector.
Increasingly, members of the Jamaican diaspora are investing in property, purchasing homes, supporting businesses and spending significant periods of the year on the island. Remote work and digital connectivity have made it possible for many professionals to earn internationally while living elsewhere. The old model of migration as a one way journey is beginning to evolve.
Yet conversations with Jamaicans abroad often reveal a common theme. Many do not reject the idea of returning. What they question is whether the opportunities exist to make such a move sustainable.
They are not rejecting Jamaica.
They are questioning the environment that awaits them.
That distinction is critical because it shifts the debate from one about loyalty to one about competitiveness.
A country that attracts talent eventually attracts capital. A country that attracts capital creates jobs. A country that creates jobs generates demand for housing, commercial space and infrastructure. The cranes that reshape skylines are often responding to economic forces that began years earlier in universities, research facilities, boardrooms and start-up ecosystems.
This is where Brown’s argument intersects with an issue rarely discussed in conversations about innovation.
Property markets do not become valuable simply because buildings exist. They become valuable because people with skills, ambition and resources choose to live, work and invest in those places.
Every thriving property market is ultimately built on confidence in a location’s future.
A software engineer returning from Toronto and purchasing an apartment in Kingston is participating in the housing market. So is an entrepreneur returning from London to launch a business. So is a technology firm opening a regional office and hiring local talent. Behind every real estate transaction lies a deeper economic story about opportunity, confidence and expectations.
This is why innovation policy and housing markets are more closely linked than they first appear.
A country cannot build a modern economy on real estate alone. Yet neither can it ignore the role that real estate plays in reflecting and reinforcing economic growth. Strong economies create strong housing markets. Innovative industries create demand for communities. Skilled professionals create demand for homes. Businesses create demand for commercial space. The relationship is cyclical and mutually reinforcing.
Brown’s concerns about artificial intelligence and intellectual property add another layer to the discussion.
Jamaica is undeniably one of the world’s great cultural powers. Its music, language and creative expression reach audiences across continents. Yet cultural influence does not automatically translate into economic value. The digital economy increasingly rewards those who own platforms, patents, algorithms and intellectual property rights.
This raises an important question. As artificial intelligence systems learn from Jamaican accents, music and culture, who benefits from that value creation?
Brown’s warning is that Jamaica risks becoming a supplier of raw cultural material while others build profitable businesses around it. Whether one sees this as an immediate threat or a long term challenge, the underlying issue remains relevant. Creativity without systems rarely produces maximum value. Creativity combined with investment, research, protection and commercialisation can transform economies.
That observation extends well beyond culture.
The same principle applies to talent itself.
Jamaica has spent decades exporting some of its brightest minds to larger economies. In many cases those individuals have gone on to achieve remarkable success. The question is not whether Jamaicans can compete internationally. The evidence overwhelmingly suggests they can.
The more important question is whether Jamaica can build an environment capable of attracting more of that talent, investment and expertise back to its shores.
Dean Jones, founder of Jamaica Homes, believes this is one of the defining issues facing the country.
“Jamaica does not lack talent, creativity or ambition. What we need are stronger bridges between those strengths and the opportunities that allow people to build their futures here. Every returning professional, every entrepreneur who chooses Jamaica and every family that invests in a home on the island is casting a vote of confidence in our future.”
That confidence matters.
It matters because development is ultimately about more than statistics, rankings or political speeches. It is about creating a country where people can see a future for themselves and their families. It is about building an economy that rewards innovation, values creativity and encourages investment. It is about ensuring that success abroad is no longer viewed as the only pathway to prosperity.
Brown’s statistics may be debated. His conclusions will undoubtedly be challenged. Yet the broader question he has raised deserves serious consideration.
Jamaica stands at a moment when intellectual property, artificial intelligence and innovation are becoming increasingly important drivers of global economic growth. At the same time, it possesses one of the largest and most accomplished diasporas relative to its size anywhere in the world.
Those two realities are not separate stories.
They are part of the same story.
The future may depend less on whether Jamaica can continue producing talented people and more on whether it can create enough reasons for those talented people to build, invest and innovate at home. Because the most valuable thing a nation can export is talent. The most valuable thing it can do is persuade that talent to help build the future on its own soil.


