Can any researcher working in a low- and middle-income country ever win a Nobel Prize?

By Nnaemeka Emmanuel Nnadi @ 2025-10-16T00:46 (+12)

It's something I think about every year when the Nobel Prizes are announced. You look at the winners in medicine, chemistry, and physics, and they’re almost always from wealthy countries, working in famous labs in Europe or North America.

It always leaves me with a question that feels personal: Could a researcher like me, working in a developing country, ever win a Nobel Prize for work done right here?

I’ve always held on to the dream of doing world-class science from my home institution, of contributing something huge without having to leave for a better-funded lab abroad. But then you look at the history books—despite all the brilliant scientists across Africa, Asia, and Latin America, it’s never actually happened.

Why? Is it as simple as not having enough money or the fanciest equipment? Or is it something deeper—about not being visible, not being part of the right networks, or just not having access to that global stage?

When you zoom out, it makes you wonder if the "right conditions" for a Nobel-worthy discovery can only exist in wealthy countries. Or could those same breakthroughs happen anywhere, if the ecosystem was there to support them?

And I can't help but wonder: if a Nobel-level discovery did come from a place like this, would it look different? Maybe it would be less theoretical and more practical—a solution to an urgent health crisis or a revolution in agriculture. Would that kind of work get the same level of recognition?

I’m not trying to challenge the winners or the prize itself. I'm just genuinely curious why the map of scientific achievement looks the way it does, and what it would take to change it.

Will there ever be a day when a breakthrough—discovered, led, and completed entirely in a lab here—gets the same applause as one from MIT or Cambridge?

Maybe the talent has always been here. Maybe it's just a question of when the world will be ready to see it.