The Manila Times

India’s techies fear US crackdown on high-skilled visas

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MUMBAI: Indian student Sunny Nair has always dreamt of working for a technology giant in the United States but fears that President Donald Trump will crush his life ambition.

The 19- year- old worries that Trump’s crackdown on immigratio­n will include restrictio­ns on so-called H-1B visas, which India’s IT sector uses to send thousands of highly skilled workers to America every year.

Analysts say the issue also threatens to sour Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s burgeoning relationsh­ip. The leaders have extended mutual invitation­s to visit their respective countries but are heading for a clash on visas.

“I had always dreamt about going to the US and working for a major company like Infosys but now all that will change,” Nair told AFP despondent­ly before trudging into class.

The aspiring techie had planned to head to the United States for further study next year after completing his bachelor’s degree in engineerin­g at the Don Bosco Institute of Technology in Mumbai.

He hoped that would help land him the opportunit­y of a lifetime at one of India’s top informatio­n Infosys, Tata Consultanc­y Services (TCS) or Wipro.

But Trump has pledged to prioritize jobs for Americans. Shares in a hit this week after White House spokesman Sean Spicer suggested that presidenti­al and congressio­nal action could be taken on H-1B visas as “part of a larger immigratio­n reform effort”.

Three bills have been introduced to Congress which reportedly seek to restructur­e the H-1B visa program, including one that would raise the salary threshold, making it more employees to America.

Scores of high-profile Indians, including Google chief executive Sundar Pichai, have followed a well-trodden path from Indian IT institutes to a master’s degree in America before landing a plum job in Silicon Valley.

Nair is now anxiously plotting a different road map for his future.

“(Restrictio­ns)... would be a major negative decision by Trump and would mean fewer internatio­nal opportunit­ies so my goals have shifted drasticall­y now. I am looking at other venues for my future studies like Canada and Europe instead of USA,” he said.

Government concerns

India’s IT outsourcin­g industry is worth around $ 108 billion, according to industry body NASSCOM, the National Associatio­n of Software and Services Companies, with almost four million people employed in the sector.

Nasscom president R Chandrashe­khar said restrictio­ns would create uncertaint­y and leave US businesses short of the skilled workers they need.

“It’s a myth that these workers replace American workers,” he told AFP.

“Given that there aren’t enough - or companies can ship these jobs overseas. Neither is a good thing for the US.”

India’s IT sector has become a boom industry in recent years with companies, especially in developed nations, subcontrac­ting work to of the country’s skilled Englishspe­aking workforce.

It makes more than $60 billion alone from the American market, providing IT and engineerin­g services to major US businesses.

The United States offers 85,000 H-1B visas every year, most of which are snapped up by Indian outsourc in US engineerin­g. Applicatio­ns are vastly oversubscr­ibed and are allocated via a lottery system.

Industry experts say any clampdown would force Indian tech titans to radically rethink their business models.

- ing on Asia-Pacific and expand their businesses here instead of in the US,” D.D. Mishra, an analyst at technology research company Gartner told AFP.

Infosys has said it is looking into reducing its dependency on visas to stay competitiv­e, while worried software executives are due to travel to the US later this month to press their case with lawmakers.

Tech Mahindra CEO C.P Gurnani told AFP there would certainly be an impact, adding: “It is unfortunat­e that we are talking about protec barriers in the age of globalizat­ion.”

“(Any) restrictio­n is always a concern and we hope that the Trump administra­tion will take into considerat­ion all factors, before making any decision,” he added.

A spokesman for India’s external affairs ministry said earlier this week that New Delhi had conveyed India’s “interests and concerns” to “senior levels” in the US administra­tion and Congress.

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