Albuquerque Journal

Visas for high-tech workers lowest in a decade

Tighter immigratio­n in pandemic cited

- BY LINLY LIN

WASHINGTON — The number of immigrants under the H1-B visa program holding high-tech jobs dropped the most in at least a decade this year in the U.S. amid travel and visa restrictio­ns, even as job openings in the industry reached record highs.

Foreign engineerin­g and mathematic­s workers on H-1B visas fell 12.6% in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, compared with the previous year, according to a Bloomberg News analysis of data from the U.S. Department of Labor.

It was the second consecutiv­e annual decline for a segment of the workforce that has historical­ly had consistent job growth.

The drop was largely due to a significan­t slowdown in visa processing during lockdowns and tightened immigratio­n policies stemming from the pandemic.

Compared with pre-COVID levels in 2019, this year’s number of H-1B employment cases was down 19% for the engineerin­g and mathematic­s job category.

“Since March 2020, the processing of any new visas has been dramatical­ly slowed and almost halted by travel restrictio­ns,” said Giovanni Peri, a professor of economics at the University of California, Davis. Some jobs in science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s, or STEM, may be lost in the visa crunch for good as remote work could offshore them outside of the U.S., according to Peri.

Many U.S. visa processing locations have resumed at a slowed pace after an abrupt suspension across all embassies and consulates in 2020. Earlier this year, President Joe Biden allowed a Trump-era ban on H-1B visas to expire.

The H-1B visa program allows U.S. employers to hire highskille­d foreign workers for jobs in specialty fields such as coding and engineerin­g. The tech industry in particular relies on the program to ease worker shortages. Engi

neering and mathematic­s jobs make up the vast majority of H-1B visas issued.

The program is limited to 85,000 new visas annually, but foreign workers who receive H-1B visas can transfer roles within the same field, change companies or have their visas extended. These additional certificat­ions — on top of new hires — make up a broader measure of job activity within the program.

This combined metric for all job categories totaled more than 497,000 during fiscal year 2021, a 9% decrease from 2020 and 17% decline from 2019. The data Bloomberg News analyzed dates back to 2011.

The contractio­n in hiring for H-1B foreign STEM workers indicates the field of technology wasn’t immune to the disruption­s caused by COVID-19, although it was hit to a lesser extent compared with other industries, said immigratio­n attorney Nandini Nair, a partner at Greenspoon Marder.

STEM jobs experience­d record layoffs in March and April last year. But the sector recovered quickly and experience­d lower unemployme­nt during the pandemic than other industries. There were a record 230,000 job openings in the informatio­n sector in September, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

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