Last Modified: Tue, Apr 04 2017. 08 32 PM IST

H1B visas to become harder to get as Donald Trump starts crackdown

Curbing H1B visa use to make it harder for companies to bring overseas tech workers to the United States, the Donald Trump administration rolls out a trio of policy shifts

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Jing CaoJoshua Brustein
Donald Trump. The US Citizenship and Immigration Services ( USCIS) agency on Friday made it harder for companies to bring overseas tech workers to the United States using the H1B visa. Photo: Reuters
Donald Trump. The US Citizenship and Immigration Services ( USCIS) agency on Friday made it harder for companies to bring overseas tech workers to the United States using the H1B visa. Photo: Reuters

New York: The US administration began to deliver on President Donald Trump’s campaign promise to crack down on the H1B visa programme that channels thousands of skilled overseas workers to companies across the technology industry.

Fed up with a programme it says favours foreign tech workers at the expense of Americans, the Trump administration rolled out a trio of policy shifts. The US Citizenship and Immigration Services ( USCIS) agency on Friday made it harder for companies to bring overseas tech workers to the US using the H-1B visa. On Monday, the agency issued a memo laying out new measures to combat what it called “fraud and abuse” in the programme. The Justice Department also warned employers applying for the visas not to discriminate against US workers.

The directions came as the annual lottery for H1B visa applications opened on Monday.

Trump campaigned on a promise to overhaul the immigration system, calling for companies to hire more Americans instead of outsourcing jobs to countries with cheaper labour or bringing in lower-paid foreign workers. Silicon Valley’s biggest tech companies, many of which were founded or run by immigrants, depend on H-1B visas and say efforts to thwart immigration threaten innovation, recruitment and start-up formation. Trump’s executive orders restricting travel from a handful of Muslim-majority nations led to unprecedented opposition from the industry.

But there’s also broad recognition that reform is needed, given several high-profile examples where American employees have been replaced by lower-paid foreign workers through the programme. Advocates for immigrants’ rights also argue H1B workers are easily exploited because their legal status is tied to a particular employer. The Economic Policy Institute estimated there were about 460,000 people working on H1B visas in 2013.

This week’s moves weren’t the administration’s first attempts to adjust the programme. Last month, the immigration department suspended a system that expedited visa processing for certain skilled workers who paid extra. But people who have been pushing for reform had become frustrated in recent weeks that the Trump administration wasn’t moving fast enough.

Also Read: H1B visa reforms—5 levers Indian IT firms can pull to soften the blow

Outsourcing firms are considered the worst abusers of the system, an impression that the tech industry has been happy to encourage. Monday’s USCIS announcement targets those firms, with the agency saying it will focus inspections on workplaces with the largest percentage of H1B workers, and those with employees who do IT work for other companies. Shares of Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp., Infosys Ltd, Wipro Ltd and Accenture Plc each slipped more than 1% on Monday.

Microsoft Corp., Facebook Inc., Alphabet Inc., Cognizant, Wipro and Accenture didn’t respond to requests to comment. Infosys declined to comment, while Tata Consulting Services Ltd said it has reduced use of high-skilled H-1B visas, while creating more US IT services jobs.

The new guidelines released Friday require additional information for computer programmers applying for H-1B visas to prove the jobs are complicated and require more advanced knowledge and experience. It’s effective immediately, so it will change how companies apply for the visas in an annual lottery process that begins Monday. The changes don’t explicitly prohibit applications for a specific type of job. Instead, they bring more scrutiny to those for computer programmers doing the simplest jobs.

“This is a step in the right direction in terms of tightening up the eligibility,” said Ron Hira, an associate professor at Howard University, who has done extensive research on the H1B programme. “You’re going to have to beef up your argument for why you need this person.”

Technology and outsourcing companies are the heaviest users of the H1B visa, which is the largest programme for temporary foreign workers in the US by a wide margin. India-based outsourcing companies receive a disproportionate percentage of the visas and tend to pay lower salaries than US-based tech firms. Employers sought H-1B visas for more than 13,000 computer programmers in 2016, citing an average salary of about $72,000, according to Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Caitlin Webber. About half of the visas sought last year were for computer-related positions, she said.

Computer programmers made up about 12% of all H1B applications certified by the Department of Labor in 2015. Of those, 41% were for positions at the lowest wage level, defined as jobs requiring people to perform routine tasks that require them to exercise little judgment on their own. The guidelines issued Friday refer specifically to entry-level computer programmers, which the US Department of Labor defines as those who write and test code to allow computer applications and software to work properly.

“This is not a change in policy on H1B and H1B1 eligibility in computer-related fields,” CeCe Gwathmey, a spokeswoman for the immigration agency, said in an email, referencing the 31 March document. The memorandum rescinded a 17-year-old set of guidelines that “relied on obsolete information and had not been used as a standard” to decide on H1B petitions for many years, she said.

Also Read: Ahead of H1B lottery, Silicon Valley’s ‘darkest’ immigration secret hits cinemas

Still, the administration hasn’t thrown its lot in with any of the plans for broader changes to the programme. Lawmakers from both parties have introduced several bills this year. One would replace the current random lottery with a system that gives priority to companies paying higher salaries. Another would explicitly prohibit companies from replacing qualified US workers with H1B workers.

Scott Corley, executive director Compete America, a coalition of employers that rely on high-skilled immigrants, said in a statement Monday that H1B reform should be part of a broader re-assessment of the country’s immigration priorities. “Our nation’s outdated legal immigration system relies heavily on a single temporary visa category, the H1B, to prove work authorization for every kind of high-skilled foreign professional we recruit,” he said.

The result, said Corley: “Chaos, inefficiencies, and criticism.” Bloomberg

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First Published: Tue, Apr 04 2017. 08 18 AM IST