Hindustan Times (Delhi)

H-1B visa filings at historical­ly low level

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WASHINGTON: The United States has announced a historic fall in the number of petitions it received for the 2019 hiring cycle under the H-1B visa programme that allows American companies to hire foreign profession­als, most of whom have come from India for years.

The US Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­ns Services (USCIS), which runs the programme, said in a statement t hat it received “1,90,098 H-1B petitions during the filing period, which began on April 2, including petitions filed for the advanced degree exemption”. This is the lowest number of applicatio­ns the US recorded since 2007, when 3,14,621 petitions were received at the USCIS website. The numbers have since fluctuated, but the first precipitou­s drop was in 2017 from 3,99,349 to 3,36,107.

US branches of Indian IT companies such as Tata Consultanc­y Services, Infosys and Wipro have been major recipients of H-1B visas, and they have declared they were cutting foreign hirings and ramping up local hirings in the face of rising opposition to their business model.

The push back has been bipar- tisan, but never so consequent­ial. The bulk of the drop in H-1B petitions is understood to have been caused by fewer filings by Indian companies, continuing a trend first noticed in 2017.

The United States grants 65,000 visas annually to profession­als hired abroad and an additional 20,000 to foreigners enrolled in US schools, colleges and universiti­es. The overall congressio­nally mandated cap is 85,000.

But the agency has received manifold applicatio­ns every year forcing early closure of the applicatio­n process. The huge number of applicatio­ns was also due to the introducti­on of a computer-generated lottery to select approved petitions a few years back.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Opting out
AP FILE Opting out

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