Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Canada set to be next stop for Indian techies

Unlike US, Canada’s path to permanent residency is smooth

- Anirudh Bhattachar­yya letters@hindustant­imes.com ■ ■

TORONTO: AMID continuing uncertaint­y over the coveted H-1B work visa programme in the United States, tech talent, particular­ly from India, may be increasing­ly bypassing it and heading north to Canada .

According to data provided to HT by Immigratio­n, Refugees and Citizenshi­p Canada (IRCC), the agency that issues work permits to foreigners, it approved 4,400 applicatio­ns until December 31 under the Global Skill Strategy programme it launched on June 12, 2017. The initiative is aimed at attracting top profession­al and managerial talent from overseas.

Of that number, over a third were Indian nationals, mainly employed in the informatio­n technology (IT) sector, making it the single largest source country of foreign employees ,nearly four times the second-largest—china.

“In the global race to attract the investment of innovative companies, competitor­s in the European Union as well as the US have considerab­ly larger pools of talent and labour to draw from than we do in Canada,” said Lindsay Wemp, a spokespers­on for the department, in an email response to HT.

Restrictio­ns on foreign workers, in line with President Donald Trump’s ‘Buy American, Hire American’ slogan, have created uncertaint­y on the grant of H-1B non-immigrant visas meant for tech profession­als, including those from Indian IT companies that have over the years been the main beneficiar­ies of the work visa programme. The Trump administra­tion unveiled measures last month to effectivel­y tighten rules on the hiring of H-1B workers by US firms at third-party locations, HT reported on February 24.

US Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services (USCIS), which issues overseas work visas, said in a statement that H-1B petitioner­s, or employers, will now have to “show by a prepondera­nce of evidence” that the beneficiar­y will be employed in a “speciality occupation”.

Canada’s Global Skills Strategy aims to help innovative companies in Canada grow, flourish, and create more jobs for Canadians by facilitati­ng the faster entry of top profession­al talent.

Global Skills Strategy is aimed at attracting high-skilled workers and offers two-week processing of these temporary work permits. In some categories where it is applicable, it also allows for a worker, once in Canada, to apply for permanent residency, a process that typically takes about a year. Among the top 10 occupation streams for the GSS are those populated by Indian techies, including computer analysts and consultant­s, interactiv­e media programmer­s and developers, and software engineers.

Global Skills Strategy also found a mention in the joint statement issued by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Canadian counterpar­t Justin Trudeau, following their meeting in New Delhi last month during the course of the latter’s visit to India. “What we’re seeing here is the movement of people who just didn’t feel comfortabl­e because of the anti-immigrant sentiments in the US,” said Ravi Jain, a leading immigratio­n lawyer in Toronto.

Jain, who practises immigratio­n law with the firm Green and Spiegel, said an additional attraction that Canada over the US was that many families requires two incomes and in most cases, there were limitation­s in America on spouses working if their partners were employed on H-1BS.

The path to permanent residency in Canada is defined, and with a points system, it can be a smooth process.

“It’s certainly very competitiv­e, relative to the US,” Jain said, referring to the moribund Green Card system in the US. While Global Skills Strategy is a pilot programme, for now, it seems to be offering another viable, efficient pathway for Indian techies to Canada.

As Jain said, “There’s a lot faster processing for IT workers, for instance. It’s nearly instant. It’s a wonderful time to be practising immigratio­n law,” he said.

 ?? SHUTTERSTO­CK ?? Canada’s Global Skills Strategy aims to help innovative companies in Canada grow, flourish, and create more jobs for Canadians by facilitati­ng the faster entry of top profession­al talent.
SHUTTERSTO­CK Canada’s Global Skills Strategy aims to help innovative companies in Canada grow, flourish, and create more jobs for Canadians by facilitati­ng the faster entry of top profession­al talent.

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