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by roel_v
5233 days ago
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Hmm. What kind of industry does Iceland have that requires 'physicists, programmers and engineers'? With a population in the hundreds of thousands, smaller than even medium sized cities in most countries, how much opportunity is/was there for these people? It's not even big enough to sustain a serious university, let alone a real r&d environment. Using Iceland as an example for other countries is usually fallacious, because it's so unique. |
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* What kind of industry does Iceland have that requires 'physicists, programmers and engineers'?
The same kind of industry that requires physicists, programmers, and engineers anywhere else: R&D, software engineering, tech sector in general. (See next answer.)
* With a population in the hundreds of thousands, smaller than even medium sized cities in most countries, how much opportunity is/was there for these people?
The population size doesn't define the size of the economy - the natural resources and infrastructure do. Iceland is a pretty large island that controls a huge swath of ocean around it that has valuable fisheries in it. Plus there's geothermal energy etc. etc., so the country is very rich.
* It's not even big enough to sustain a serious university, let alone a real r&d environment.
That's simply not true. Iceland has pretty significant research output in biology, genetics, computer science, geothermal and hydropower engineering, etc. etc.
* Using Iceland as an example for other countries is usually fallacious, because it's so unique.
:) That's certainly true. In a way. But people are people, nations are nations, good ideas are good ideas, and pitfalls are pitfalls.