Not sure this fits in the ICE thread, so I'll give it its own thread.
US signals intention to rethink job H-1B lottery
Kevin Lynn, executive director of Institute for Sound Public Policy, a non-profit that advocates for US workers and the reform of guest worker programs, wrote in a blog post on Thursday
"In 2023, American colleges graduated 134,153 citizens or green card holders with bachelor's or master's degrees in computer science. That same year, our federal government handed out work permits to at least 110,098 foreign workers in computer occupations through just three major guest worker programs. That's equal to 82 percent of our graduating class who are guaranteed jobs even before any Americans walk across the stage for their diploma."
I understand that software companies, to stay competitive, need to fill position that cannot be filled by the existing American workforce, but the H-1B visa system is being used not to fill unfillable positions, but to undercut existing American workers.
I have said this in other contexts, but it bear saying here as well. Americans as a group have many good qualities (courage, generosity, to name a few), but one thing Americans stink at is judgment (saying, "This one is worthy, that one is not").
So Congress creates a program for American employers that have a position that they simply cannot fill within the US work force and that failure will hurt the company's ability to compete. The company can recruit overseas. The company gets to decide whether they can or cannot fill the position within the US workforces, so guess what? A significant portion of US IT jobs get filled by H-1B visa holders from India. In effect, Congress has created a system to keep Americans from getting jobs. You get to outsource the labor while keeping the company inside the US.
US signals intention to rethink job H-1B lottery
Kevin Lynn, executive director of Institute for Sound Public Policy, a non-profit that advocates for US workers and the reform of guest worker programs, wrote in a blog post on Thursday
"In 2023, American colleges graduated 134,153 citizens or green card holders with bachelor's or master's degrees in computer science. That same year, our federal government handed out work permits to at least 110,098 foreign workers in computer occupations through just three major guest worker programs. That's equal to 82 percent of our graduating class who are guaranteed jobs even before any Americans walk across the stage for their diploma."
I understand that software companies, to stay competitive, need to fill position that cannot be filled by the existing American workforce, but the H-1B visa system is being used not to fill unfillable positions, but to undercut existing American workers.
I have said this in other contexts, but it bear saying here as well. Americans as a group have many good qualities (courage, generosity, to name a few), but one thing Americans stink at is judgment (saying, "This one is worthy, that one is not").
So Congress creates a program for American employers that have a position that they simply cannot fill within the US work force and that failure will hurt the company's ability to compete. The company can recruit overseas. The company gets to decide whether they can or cannot fill the position within the US workforces, so guess what? A significant portion of US IT jobs get filled by H-1B visa holders from India. In effect, Congress has created a system to keep Americans from getting jobs. You get to outsource the labor while keeping the company inside the US.