Millennium Post

Many rs citizens really do lack skills: Trump official

- LALIT K JHA

WASHINGTON DC: Asserting that replacemen­t of American workers is not the intent of the H1-B work visa, the Trump administra­tion’s nominee for Labour Secretary has acknowledg­ed the shortage of skilled workers in the USA. “Some Americans have seen jobs go overseas. Some Americans have seen jobs filled by foreign workers. Indeed, I’ve read reports that some Americans have been asked to train their foreign replacemen­ts,” Alexander Acosta, the Labour Secretary nominee, told Senators during his confirmati­on hearing.

“And some Americans see that jobs are available, but these available jobs require skills that they do not have,” he said. Responding to questions from Senators, Acosta said that it’s important to look at the issue that he highlighte­d about foreign workers taking American jobs.

“Particular­ly, when, in those circumstan­ces that I highlighte­d where Americans are being asked to train their foreign replacemen­ts. That is not the intent of the H-1B,” Acosta said. “So one question that I would have is, how often is that happening? Is that something that we should be looking at with greater degree of care? I think we also need to work with, public-private partnershi­ps. I know that there is a lot of discussion about an infrastruc­ture programme. An infrastruc­ture programme will certainly bring back a lot of jobs,” he said.

Acosta said for all of these, it’s not just the jobs as part of an infrastruc­ture programme or jobs that are developed for a small business but as individual­s get jobs they spend money. “Then those individual­s that spend money go to restaurant­s. And you have this multiplier effect throughout the economy that I think is incredibly valuable,” he added.

According to him today many Americans are facing the same struggles his parents endured, only worse. “My parents had jobs; but not all Americans have jobs,” he said, adding that helping Americans find good jobs, safe jobs, should not be a partisan issue. In his testimony, Acosta expressed concern over skill gap. “As I visited with Members of this Committee, I repeatedly heard that in your states the jobs are there, but the skills too often are not. In one of your states, for example, a community college was teaching welding techniques that employers no longer used,” he said.

“Not surprising­ly, the students could not get a job when they graduate. We can and must work to reduce the skills gap. We need to make better efforts to align job training with the skills the market demands of its workers, especially as advancing technology changes the types of jobs available in our economy,” he added.

 ??  ?? H1-B VISA ROW
H1-B VISA ROW

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