The Impact of Brain Drain on HRM in the Sri Lankan Banking Industry

 


The movement of highly educated, talented, and skilled people from one country to another in search of better opportunities and higher salaries is known as “Brain Drain”. Brain Drain has grown to be a significant problem in Sri Lanka in recent years. Sri Lankans frequently choose to emigrate due to economic instability, lack of career prospects and growth, political and social unpredictability and the strong demand for skilled labor abroad.  

According to the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL, 2025), more than 300,000 Sri Lankans left the country for brain drain including many skilled professionals especially in the field of IT, banking, healthcare and engineering. This has a strong impact on Human Resource management as it directly affects the organizations managing their workforce.


From an HRM standpoint, brain drain creates challenges in talent acquisition, retention, employees’ motivation and career development. When skilled professionals leave, companies face gaps in increased recruitment cost, higher training and development needs, talent shortage and fewer innovations (World bank, 2023).

According to the banking industry, banks depend on highly trained professionals and based on customer service. The primary goals of the bankers are to satisfy the customers and provide best customer service (Marko et al.,2015). With the less experienced staff, banks may struggle to provide fast and accurate services to the customers. As a result, customers’ trust will be damaged. Additionally, lack of experts in fintech and digital transformation, banks may not be able to maintain the competitiveness in the banking sector and significant projects they fund may potentially face delays. As a result of these reasons, the banking industry is anticipated to move from profitability to a loss-making position. 



Conclusion

HRM is directly impacted by brain drain since it makes it difficult to find new hires and keep talented workers. Additionally, it hinders the banking industry’s ability to grow and compete. Sri Lankan banks must implement the necessary measures to keep their talented staff in order to address these problems.




  Source : YouTube (2024)

References

Central Bank of Sri Lanka – Annual Report 2025

P. N. Sanjeewani1 and K. Abdul-Cader (2025) “Understanding the Impact of Brain Drain of Academics and Professionals on the Sri Lankan Economy”

Marko Laketa, Dusica Sanader, Luka Laketa and Zvonimir Misic (2015) "Customer relationship management: Concept and importance for banking sector"




Comments

  1. How does economic instability influence Brain Drain?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Economic instability pushes employees to seek security elsewhere. Rising living costs, currency depreciation, and limited job stability reduce confidence in local opportunities. As a result, skilled professionals look for countries offering better salaries, stable economies, and long-term career growth, increasing brain drain.

      Delete
  2. I think that the major cause of brain drain is due to inadequate compensation packages offered to talented individuals. The company needs to ensure that they keep talented individuals in the firm.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I agree that inadequate compensation is a major factor. However, it’s not only about salary, factors like career growth, recognition, and work environment also matter. To retain talent, companies need a balanced approach that combines competitive pay with strong development opportunities and employee engagement.

      Delete
  3. This is a very relevant and timely topic. Brain drain is having a significant impact on the Sri Lankan banking industry, especially when it comes to retaining experienced professionals and maintaining service quality.

    As skilled employees leave for better opportunities abroad, organisations face increased pressure on recruitment, training, and succession planning. It also affects institutional knowledge and can slow down innovation and decision-making.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for your insight. I agree that brain drain creates pressure on recruitment, training, and succession planning. The loss of experienced employees also weakens institutional knowledge, making it harder for banks to maintain service quality and innovate effectively.

      Delete
  4. This is a very good explanation of an important issue in Sri Lanka today. Brain drain creates many problems for HRM and makes it harder for banks to keep skilled employees. You have explained the impact on the banking industry very clearly.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for your positive feedback. I’m glad the explanation clearly highlighted how brain drain affects HRM and the banking industry, especially in terms of talent retention and operational challenges.

      Delete
  5. This is a very insightful and timely post on brain drain and its impact on HRM in Sri Lanka. You clearly explain the issue well. Do you think brain drain is mainly driven by better overseas opportunities, or more by limitations within Sri Lankan HR systems such as career growth and rewards?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for your valuable feedback. I believe brain drain is driven by both factors. While better overseas opportunities attract employees, limitations in Sri Lankan HR systems such as limited career growth, lower rewards, and fewer development opportunities and also push them to leave. So, it’s a combination of push and pull factors.

      Delete
  6. “This blog serves as a great learning resource for both HR professionals and students. The concepts are explained in a simple and clear way.”

    ReplyDelete
  7. The strain on customer trust you mentioned is a very real risk for our local banks. It feels like a clear hygiene factor failure under Herzberg’s Two-Factor Theory (Herzberg 1966). If the external economic environment and base salaries don't meet basic needs, even the best internal workplace culture won't prevent emigration. Maybe we should look closer at how banks can leverage more creative, global standard incentives to keep high potentials engaged despite the ongoing macro economic pull.

    ReplyDelete
  8. This is an insightful analysis of the hidden costs of migration. Banking is built on trust and accuracy, and as this piece highlights, a less experienced workforce directly impacts customer satisfaction. Shifting from 'reactive hiring' to 'proactive retention' is now a survival necessity for Sri Lankan HR professionals

    ReplyDelete

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