IT Leadership

The H-1B Visa Dilemma, Part 1: A Broken System

The disconnect has never been more pronounced between the supply and demand of H-1B visas, the visa program that allows guest workers in the United States.

The technology industry has been at the forefront of the H-1B visa debate, lobbying for the government to allow more foreign workers into the U.S. each year.

The number of H-1B visa applications for 2009 probably reached the legislated cap of 65,000 on the first day of this year’s week-long filing period, which ended April 7, as did applications for advanced degree exemptions, which are capped at 20,000. More than 160,000 H-1B applications were submitted in total, in what has become an annual filing frenzy.

The issue is a particularly pointed one for U.S. IT industry leaders, who continue to lobby for a much larger quota or an entirely new system. Failing in such efforts so far, industry leaders are outsourcing highly skilled jobs overseas and moving operations offshore instead.

Ensuring America’s Competitiveness

The debate surrounding H-1B visas strikes at the heart of strongly held American values and principles — creating and keeping jobs here at home, maintaining national economic competitiveness and the traditional perception of the U.S. as a land of opportunity and haven for the oppressed.

Proponents of increasing the H-1B quota argue that doing so is of vital interest if the U.S. intends to maintain its position as a global leader in a range of cutting edge fields and core disciplines.

“Google believes that the current H-1B cap should be raised to reflect the growth rate of our technology-driven economy. If the United States is to maintain its status as the world’s high-tech leader, it must continue to attract, hire and retain the best and brightest, many of whom are already in the U.S. studying at one of our world-class universities,” maintains Keith Wolfe, Google’s global mobility manager.

“The U.S. scientific, engineering and tech communities cannot hope to maintain their present position of international leadership if they are unable to hire and retain highly educated foreign talent. We also cannot hope to grow our economy and create more jobs if we are ceding leadership in innovation to other nations,” he added.

The issue also invokes one of the U.S.’s most deeply felt values — that the nation serves as a beacon of economic opportunity and personal freedom for people the world over.

“Since the beginning of our republic, immigration has powered the U.S. economy. To refuse entry to technical professionals would only cause more research and development to move overseas — or simply north or south of the border. Vancouver and maybe even the Mexican Riviera offer attractive alternatives to U.S. research facilities,” Anupam Chander, professor of law at the University of California, Davis, currently a visiting professor at Yale Law School, told TechNewsWorld.

Job Creator or Killer?

The U.S. IT industry would not be the same, to say the least, if it were not for the contributions of new immigrants.

“As a successful, innovative American company, Google is creating jobs in the U.S. every day. And we are just one of the more recent success stories for immigrants in Silicon Valley. eBay, Yahoo, Sun Microsystems and many others — all of which have added untold value to the American economy — were all founded by immigrants who were welcomed by America,” pointed out Google’s Wolfe.

“H-1B visa workers have played an integral part in the booming IT industry in the U.S. These H-1B workers have created and supported innovations, products and services that have helped all Americans. On average, H-1B professionals will have a two- to three-person, non-H-1B U.S citizen support staff created for the high level position that the H-1B holder assumes,” added David Silver, principal attorney at Darren Silver & Associates, a law firm that specializes in assisting small, medium-sized and Fortune 500 companies with H-1B and L1 visa application processes.

Countering these claims, the H-1B visa program is criticized by some foreign-born, as well as U.S. IT industry employees, economists and labor groups. The latter argue that the program pushes older, experienced and more costly U.S. employees out the door, deprives U.S. citizens of high-skilled jobs and lowers salaries; the former claim that H-1B visa holders receive lower than average salaries and little or no benefits yet are subject to Social Security taxes that they cannot take with them when they return to their home countries.

For example, the following was posted as a comment last month to an article about H-1B visas on the Money section of CNN’s Web site:

“There are currently over 1.5 MILLION UNDEREMPLOYED U.S. IT workers, American citizens with IT/CompSci degrees who are working in jobs outside the IT/CompSci industry as store clerks, grocery store stockers, headhunters, etc., making far less pay than they would if an American company would hire them at prevailing wages for that industry. They could be retrained but U.S. companies won’t do that when they can get H-1Bs so much easier, who work for far less and who won’t leave their company for about 5 years on average in the hopes of getting U.S. citizenship.”

The H-1B Debate in DC

They are not falling on deaf ears in Washington either. Senators Dick Grubin (D-Ill.) and Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) are working at revising the legislation with the aim of ensuring that it isn’t abused.

The two senators on April 1, the first day of this year’s H-1B filing period, sent a letter to the top 25 recipients of approved H-1B visa petitions in 2007 — some 20,000 of the 65,000 issued — seeking detailed information on how each firm uses the visa program.

“By the end of the day today, all of the H-1B visas for the year will likely be spoken for,” Durbin said. “The H-1B program can’t be allowed to become a job killer in America. We need to ensure that firms are not misusing these visas, causing American workers to be unfairly deprived of good high-skill jobs here at home.”

Durbin and Grassley have been doggedly following up on concerns that loopholes in and abuse of the H-1B and L-1 visa programs are costing qualified Americans jobs. Last year, they introduced the H-1B and L-1 Visa Fraud and Abuse Prevention Act, which would require H-1B applicants to make a good faith effort to hire American workers first and would give the Department of Labor greater oversight authority in investigating possible fraud and abuse.

“I have no doubt that we’ll hear arguments all day as to why the cap on H-1B visas should be raised, but nobody should be fooled. The bottom line is that there are highly skilled American workers being left behind, searching for jobs that are being filled by H-1B visa holders,” Grassley said. “It’s time to close the loopholes that have allowed this to happen and enact real reform.”

The H-1B Visa Dilemma, Part 2: What to Do?

6 Comments

  • I’d support an increase to the visa cap so long that those positions must be paid fair market value. When you bring over international staff at 25% of the comparable American salary, you are undercutting the American worker. More so, you are not getting the world’s "best and brighest" for those low-ball rates either.

    • That’s not been my experience, working on a team of mostly H1Bs. They didn’t work as hard as I did, rarely worked overtime, and never seemed to be put under the same time pressures I was. I also had to listen to them putting down Americans, while American workers were explicitly told we couldn’t say anything derogatory about their "country of origin". The only thing immigrants seem to do better or harder than Americans is kissing the boss’ behind.

      • "…H-1b workers may be hired even when a qualified U.S. worker wants the job, and a U.S. worker can be displaced from the job in favor of the foreign worker." from Dept of Labor Strategic Plan 2006-2011

        No Americans Need Apply! H-1B visa-hiring program legally takes opportunities away from Americans and Green Card holders due to concerted efforts of big business. Restoring equal opportunity to the American workforce is the real issue.

        Surprised to learn that companies can run want ads discriminating against American citizens and green card holders? Bright Future Jobs, a people’s PAC, is working hard to raise awareness of the "Durbin-Grassley H-1B and L-1 Visa Fraud and Abuse Prevention Act of 2007." But, we’re up against powerful lobbying groups — companies are working hard to EXPAND the H-1B hiring program, spreading the myth of labor shortages, when in reality there is a GLUT of unemployed science, tech, engineering and math grads.

        Go to http://www.h1btrap.com or http://www.brightfuturejobs.com for the real deal on this issue. Join our campaign to restore equal opportunity, tell your stories, and contribute liberally to stop the abuse.

  • We have tons of people in the united states looking for work and cannot find it. I myself, with a degree in computer science/networking have a hard time finding a job for what i went to school for. So we have these companies wanting to bring people in from other countries to work when we cant even give work to our own residents?

  • It’s funny that you meantion Google as the big innovator, but few people know that Google success is due to the fact that it stole the idea of "adwords" from IdeaLab (later known as Overture).

    Idealab was created by Bill Gross, a U.S. businessman.

    I have interviewed H-1b workers coming from Google. These guys could not answer basic Unix questions, though they were applying for a Unix Software Engineering position.

    Google uses job-shops, the same companies that are using up all the h-1b applications each year, for IT jobs.

    Google throws away 99% of the resumes that it gets. I have been in my industry for 15 years, as web-software developer (now a manager), using the same tools that Google uses.

    I have applied to Google several times, not once did they respond to my application. The problem with Google is with their resume and hiring system.

    At the same times that I applied, I have known several people who did get an interview at Google, because they knew someone on the inside at Google.

    If you aren’t an easy to fire worker (i.e. job-shop contractor), or if you don’t know someone on the inside at Google, your chances of being hired (no matter how skilled you are) at Google are practically zero.

    It’s easier to get hired at Google through a h-1b job-shop, than to be hired as a skill U.S. worker walk-in, unless you have personal ties to someone at the company.

  • There is another side of this story. I’ve worked with H1-B VISA employees for years and find them (for the most part) to be well-educated, competent and pleasant. However, because of the rules governing their VISA status they are easily forced to work 80+ hour work weeks, and are usually denied the same rights and benefits that are offered to U.S. workers (i.e. EEOC protections and other labor law standards are ignored). I have heard my guest worker friends complain bitterly about threats being made of – "You’ll work however long it takes or it’s back to India for you!" And, since they are easily strong-armed into indentured servitude (usually for 5 years, until they can obtain a green card), it makes it extremely difficult for Americans who know their rights in the workplace to compete. Plus, the whole way the H1-B VISAs are obtained by the workers is frought with graft, from what I’ve been told. And, it doesn’t take much arm twisting to get H1-B VISA workers to step around and avoid various laws – i.e. Sarbanes-Oxley securities law, etc. It’s a system that’s definitey in need of a revamp.

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