The Borneo Post

Clean up US employment visa mill

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THE TRUMP administra­tion is taking its first, cautious steps to clean up the much-abused H-1B visa system, by which skilled foreign workers are imported to fill jobs in the technology sector and other specialty occupation­s. The moves so far, mainly involving tighter oversight, are fine but inadequate. Deeper reforms are needed for a programme that, while vital to maintain the nation’s competitiv­eness, has been used to displace well-paid and older American workers with cheap and ostensibly temporary foreign labour and to turn some of those guest workers into virtual indentured servants.

As a candidate, Donald Trump talked out of both sides of his mouth, at different points saying he favoured importing skilled guest workers into the United States and saying he didn’t like it, citing well- documented instances of abuse. (Among the worst involved Disney, which required American workers to train their lower-paid foreign replacemen­ts.)

Now, as president, Trump is starting to move. Just as tens of thousands of H-1B applicatio­ns were filed last week, the administra­tion announced that enforcemen­t agents would intensify site visits to the companies that rely most heavily on the guest- workers programme, especially Indian outsourcin­g firms that use it to import tens of thousands of informatio­n-tech workers annually. The goal will be to ensure that the guest workers qualify as “specialty” labour, which is a requiremen­t of H-1B visas.

At the same time, the Justice Department announced it would not tolerate employer misuse of that programme to discrimina­te against or displace American labour.

Employers and some economists are at odds over the extent to which companies face a shortage of American workers to fill tech and other skilled jobs. A frequently cited figure of 500,000 unfilled positions may be somewhat inflated, but there is no doubt that US colleges and universiti­es cannot keep up with the demand for graduates, especially with advanced and highly specialise­d degrees.

Hence the importance of the H-1B programme, which grants 85,000 visa sannually to guest workers, nearly three- quarters of them from India - a fraction of the overall applicatio­ns. Of that number, many have only bachelor’s degrees and are chosen by lottery; just 20,000 are foreign graduates of US universiti­es with advanced degrees.

Reforms are needed on several fronts. For starters, H1B visa holders already in the country should be allowed to change jobs to prevent their exploitati­on by employers. More fundamenta­lly, the programme should be retooled to ensure that genuinely high- skilled labour is prioritise­d, not that of entrylevel programmer­s. That may disadvanta­ge the big Indian outsourcin­g firms that flood the system with applicatio­ns; so be it. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? The Trump administra­tion is taking its first, cautious steps to clean up the much-abused H-1B visa system, by which skilled foreign workers are imported to fill jobs in the technology sector and other specialty occupation­s.
The Trump administra­tion is taking its first, cautious steps to clean up the much-abused H-1B visa system, by which skilled foreign workers are imported to fill jobs in the technology sector and other specialty occupation­s.

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