Immigration experts say the long 'misused' and 'abused' visa, a favourite with Indians, has fallen out of favour with both Republican and Democrat administrations for decades. Even if Joe Biden defeats Donald Trump, it's unlikely to get easier
A heady blue-versus-red vote count is underway, punctuated by see-sawing percentage points and contrarian calls for states. As the world holds its breath before its most powerful person is elected, many Indians and Indian-Americans are on tenterhooks.
In October, the Donald Trump administration proposed yet another series of obstacles to the H-1B visa process, which is a popular way for Indians to immigrate to America. It hopes to do away with the computerised lottery system, a random selection process, to procure the visa, and replace it with a wage-based system in which applicants will be selected based on salary levels.
This is the latest in a series of attacks against the H-1B programme, including a suspension on the entry of foreign workers (and therefore, issuance of new immigrant visas) until the end of the year that Trump announced in June.
However, President Trump may not be the only obstacle in the road. Let’s break it down.
What’s going on with the H-1B?
According to the new rules, the wage criteria for those coming to the US on an H-1B visa (widely used by technology companies to hire skilled Indian workers) have been significantly increased by the Department of Labor. Later in the month, the Department of Homeland Security made the announcement of doing away with the lottery, in a statement titled ‘DHS, Trump Administration Protect American Jobs from Unfair International Competition’.
“[This] would prioritize the selection of H-1B registrations (or petitions, if the registration process is suspended) based on corresponding wage levels in order to better protect the economic interests of US workers, while still allowing US employers to meet their personnel needs and remain globally competitive,” the statement said. “Modifying the H-1B cap selection process by replacing the random selection process with a wage-level-based selection process is a better way to allocate H-1Bs when demand exceeds supply.”
“If finalized as proposed, this new selection process would incentivize employers to offer higher wages or petition for positions requiring higher skills and higher-skilled workers instead of using the program to fill relatively lower-paid vacancies,” the statement added.
Many Indians worry this will put them at a disadvantage against American workers, since they have traditionally commanded lower wages. On October 30, 46 tech companies, including Twitter, Facebook, Google and Amazon, filed an amicus brief challenging the new rules.
“The new DHS and DOL Rules will dramatically reduce US businesses’ ability to hire these skilled foreign workers—one senior DHS official estimated that they will render ineligible more than one-third of petitions for H-1B visas,” the brief states. “That will significantly reduce the economic benefits provided by the H-1B program, stunt the US economy’s recovery from the pandemic, and lead to greater reliance by US companies on operations outside of the United States—inflicting long-term damage to our Nation’s economic growth.”
What are the issues with the H-1B?
“I don’t know why people keep talking about H-1B—it’s finished. It’s over,” says Mark Davies, global chairman at Davies & Associates, LLC, an immigration law firm based in New York. “US politicians, for years, Democrat or Republican, even under the Obama administration, do not want the H-1B. It’s going to continue to get more and more restricted.”