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A large talent pool isn't necessarily a positive if you don't spend a lot of effort on your recruiting (mostly filtering) process. It really just increases the risk of bad hires.
An example of a language that I could see shifting from one to the other pretty soon is Rust now that it could be a way in to many of the high paying big companies like Google, Amazon, etc.
These companies hire from a different pool than you described.
I mean, Yaron used to go around a lot and give guest lectures about OCaml programming "in industry" at all sorts of functional programming courses in universities. I have to imagine they thereby recruited people who would have never considered HFT shops otherwise.
Then again I think one of the founders or top execs is an alum, so it’s possible Cornell has that course in that language because of Jane Street
Is that only because OCaml has more of an FP flavor, or is it something else about the language?