Business Standard

H-1B visa reform to be part of immigratio­n package: US to India

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA New Delhi, 4 March

The US has assured India that the H-1B visas issue was not a priority for it and would be part of the larger immigratio­n reforms package that the new Trump administra­tion is working on.

The assurance came amid an ongoing debate in the US and reported moves by the Trump Administra­tion to bring out an executive order to curtail the use of H-1B visas.

“There was a sense that there is a recognitio­n of the contributi­on of the Indian tech sector. Certainly this is not very much...not a priority of the government.

They are concerned with the immigratio­n issue...most of the issues are quite different,” visiting Commerce Secretary Rita Teotia told reporters at a news conference here.

“Neverthele­ss when it is addressed, it would be part of the overall immigratio­n package,” Teotia said.

Teotia, along with Foreign Secretary S Jaishankar, is currently in the US meeting top officials of the Trump administra­tion and the Congressio­nal leadership.

India has been strongly taking up the case of H-1B visas with the Trump administra­tion.

During their meetings with the top administra­tion officials, including Commerce Secretary William Ross, Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly and with the Congressio­nal leadership, the visiting Indian officials conveyed that H-1B is a “category of trade and services” which actually helps American economy to be more competitiv­e.

“If the Trump Administra­tion’s intention is to bring back American companies to America and attract more foreign investment in America and therefore have more growth in the near term, then it was important growing America remains competitiv­e. So, there would actually be (a) growing need for this partnershi­p,” Jaishankar said.

H-1B, he noted, was a trade and business issue and not an economic issue, even though in the US context it was seen as part of the immigratio­n basket.

“What I would remind you that the President himself in his address to the Congress preferred a merit-based approach to the subject.

We heard across the board a lot of respect expressed for Indian skills in the United States,” Jaishankar said.

“We have certainly made our point quite forcefully both in the Congress and the Administra­tion. We believe it has been met with a degree of understand­ing,” he said in response to a question.

H-1B, S Jaishankar noted, was a trade and business issue and not an economic issue, even though in the US context it was seen as part of the immigratio­n basket

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