The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Indian firms gaming H-1B visa system: US lawmaker

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA

INDIAN FIRMS, which account for the bulk of H1B visas, have “gamed” the system, an influentia­l American lawmaker on Monday alleged and insisted his legislatio­n introduced in the Congress will help fix the existing flaws.

Congressma­n Darrell Issa, who recently introduced the legislatio­n which calls for an increase in the salary of H-1B workers, insisted that his move would bring the best talents to the US and help fix the flaws in the existing H-1B system.

“The president supports (the bill). I think we will have strong support in the Senate,” he told a Washington audience at an event hosted by Atlantic Council at the Capitol Visitor Center.

He alleged that Indian companies have “gamed the system” and made the “best use of this flawed immigratio­n system”.

“You can’t have 75 per cent of a programme going to an Indianowne­r, Indian operated, Indian employee visas and not say that this is distortion,” Issa said, adding it’s common sense to hire the best and not the other way around. “It would be interestin­g that India would be concerned that a relatively simple change (in H-1B visas) that does not target India, somehow happens to be accommodat­ion for India,” he said.

“Today 75 per cent of all H1BS are coming in about $6065,000, which is pretty absurd considerin­g these are highskille­d visas... If they were told to write $100,000 and you will get your H-1B, they will write that check,” he said.

The lawmaker from California called for fixing the system and removing the country-based caps. He also said increasing the salary would raise the quality of people coming to the US.

“An auction system is not a bad way to go,” he said. “A graduate with a STEM degree from a US university is not going to take a job with $60,000 salary. And that’s the reality,” said the Congressma­n.

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