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Part 3 – The Recession – Is the US right in stopping H1B workers? Feb 18

Welcome to Part 3 of my series of posts on the current Recession. While not strictly essential, you may want to look at Part 1 and Part 2 before you read any further.

In all the major newspapers in the country, one important item in the news is the big hoopla about Senators Grassley and Sanders who introduced an amendment in the US Stimulus bill that – simply put – seeks to ban all stimulus payment recipients from employing any workers with H1B visas. Why all the ire against the H1B visa in particular? Why the singling out of Indian companies especially? Before we pass judgment on the Senators decisions,  let’s consider the reality – as they see it.

Here are some details about the H1B visa that the common man does not know (important points highlighted). Firstly, the H1B visa is meant for American companies  to fill temporary shortages in their workforce. The workers hired, if found suitable and willing, would then embrace the American way of life and elect to settle down in the US for good. To facilitate this, the American employer would sponsor a Permanent Residency for the worker (aka the “Green Card“) and thus, the US would gain another skilled worker, thus enriching it’s brain power, the worker would gain citizenship of the United States and the employer would gain a happy employee – a win-win situation for all.

Now, let’s see how the H1B is practically used. A New York bank needs a technology expert to work on a new technology. The average American technologist is available, but his price is astronomical. He/she works by the hour, refuses to work on weekends and charges a hefty overtime fee as well. Meanwhile, there exists a company named Winfy Inc, which is actually the US arm of Winfy Ltd., an Indian company that offers the services of a technology person from among their employees who can fulfill this need, but is currently in India. The bank agrees, and Winfy Inc applies for an H1B visa for their technologist. Eventually, the visa is granted and the technologist travels to the US. The technologist is good at technology, but lacking in refinement and good communication skills. He, however, learns these as he goes along.

At this point, one of two things happen.

With time, the technologist nears the end of his project and decides to return to India. However, the bank is now convinced that the technologist is a good candidate and the bank hires him directly with an H1B visa. It is important to note that the salary paid to the technologist is reasonable and fair. However, it is lesser than what an American technologist (from the preceding paragraph) wanted. In time, the bank applies for the Green Card of the Indian technologist and he joins the American mainstream.

In the other scenario, as the technologist nears the end of his project, he and Winfy Inc make their move. They offer to the Bank a business case wherein they detail plans of setting up an ODC (an Offshore Development Center) in India to do the exact work that the technologist was doing. As part of this plan, the US division in the Bank would be transitioned offshore and all it’s US positions eliminated. The Bank accepts this offer and as a result, American jobs are lost and transitioned offshore.

I should admit that the above two scenarios are purely hypothetical and oversimplified. Sometimes, there are other alternative situations and different results may emerge, but in most cases, the outcome is one of the two stated above. What Senators Grassley and Sanders are trying to do is to ensure that the first scenario continues while the second is stopped. They are also trying to ensure that with all the funds being received by the US Banks, they do not replace American workers with foreign ones. As a precursor, they sent letters to the largest H1B recipient companies trying to gauge how these companies were using their visas.

Here are some more practical suggestions that could be considered:

  1. H1B recipients need to detail the work done by their visa workers – This will make the US firms accountable to ensure that workers who get the visa are working on what they were supposed to.
  2. The US company must decide to either provide a Green Card to the worker or cancel the H1B after three years – This period of time is sufficient for the employer to judge if the worker is really worth providing permanent residency, after all.
  3. Conduct audits into the business of companies that hold a large number of H1B and L1 visas on their US payrolls – The purpose of the visa is to allow temporary positions to be filled. How can companies have more than 40% employees holding a visa justify their usage?
  4. Pass laws to prevent visa sweatshops – Remember that when a worked works for Winfy Inc, that company absorbs a large percentage of the revenue generated – and this goes on infinitely. Once the technologist works for the Bank for more than say 6 months, make it mandatory for the Bank to put him on their rolls as an employee – and transfer his H1B visa to their firm. Rule #2 above, applies after 3 years.
  5. Reform the L1 visa as well – The visa sweatshops also use the L1 visa when the H1B quota is full. The purpose of an L1 visa is intra-company transfer. Companies using large numbers of L1 visas need to provide justification.

The purpose of the above ideas is not to put a dent in the pockets of Winfy Inc., rather, the idea is to ensure that the H1 and L1 visa streams are not misused.

Do you have any positive suggestions? List them here.

EDIT:  If you read this far, I’m sure you will love the other parts of this Recession series.  Don’t miss Part 4 – How the hell can a Big Bank go Bust?

Note: IANAL (I am not a lawyer) and neither am I an authority on immigration or American law. The above post and suggestions are purely based on personal experience. Any similarity in names or situations are purely coincidental.

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4 Responses

  1. 1
    Raghveer Dhone 
    Tuesday, 24. February 2009

    Chetan,
    Another good article. I believe what the senators are trying to do is right. I think you forgot to cover one important part of the H-1B process, Labor Certification. I am sure you are aware of the recent H-1B visa fraud. Running LCA in one state and paying the worker in another is unacceptable. I have come across a lot of H-1B workers who have been ill treated by their employers. Let this be a warning to all of them. Such drastic steps are in the best interests of American citizens as well as immigrants.
    Regards,
    Raghu

  2. 2
    Niamah Tronzo 
    Friday, 13. March 2009

    Are you serious? The H1B program has been very detrimental to the US. Why on God’s green Earth should it continue?, especially in an economic downturn. The H1B program has skewed the employee supply and demand curve sufficiently to reduce the numbers of US citizens going for degrees in the technical field due to pay scale suppression – why go through the rigors of getting an engineering degree when other less demanding fields pay similar or more?

    The H1B program was only supposed to be a stop gap to allow employers to fill positions where no local talent could be found. That argument has become farcical as positional requirements now show needs for applicants speaking unknown dialects or having skill sets that are unique to a targeted individual where the actual job makes no utilization whatsoever of these ‘unique’ skills.

    The program was ill conceived from the get go. Now it’s main purpose appears to be a training ground for offshoring.

  3. @Niamah,

    I totally appreciate your viewpoint.

    However, you need to understand that the reason that the US became a superpower today is due to it’s open policies. In other words, it encouraged US corporations to go across the world and seek out new markets and conquer them. As a result, when you feel thirsty in India, you drink a Coke and when you want to go somewhere, you ride in your Chevy Aveo.

    Unfortunately, you need to keep in mind that with this globalization comes the side-effect of cheaper labor available on the other side of the world as well. So, if the American IT worker wants to really become competitive, he/she needs to think global as well. Did America shed tears when the Indian Thums Up brand was killed by Coke?

    Coming back to the H1B, I just want to point out that the visa is indeed misused in a lot of cases to move jobs offshore and displace Americans. This could be viewed as wrong – however, you must agree that stopping the H1B would mean throttling innovation in the US and encouraging US companies to move to offshore for good. What jobs would American kids have then?

    While I think that Sen. Grassley and Sanders want to weed out such cases, I have mixed feelings about the move. The ban on 65000 H1B visas will not serve to suddenly create millions of jobs in the US market and bring it out of recession. Measures such as these make politicians popular and tarnish the US’ image as the land of opportunity.

    Which is why I tried to suggest some measures that allow the creme-de-la-creme of the world to come to the US, but a side measure to ensure that they remain here and contribute instead of taking knowledge back home.

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