Why Can't Obama and Congress See That Our Poor Immigration Policies Punish American Companies Who Want to Hire Skilled Immigrants?
Published April 11, 2011 | FoxNews.com
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A January 2011 Government Accountability Office (GAO) report found that small firms were hurt the most by H-1B restrictions. “Small firms were more likely to fill their positions with different candidates, which they said resulted in delays and sometimes economic losses, particularly for firms in rapidly changing technology field,” it said. Most large firms found other, more expensive, ways of hiring the workers they needed.
Firms petition for H-1Bs when they are expanding, so the quota, fees, and lottery amount to a huge tax on business expansion – the last thing a recovering economy needs. The Obama administration and Congress have made the process even more difficult.
President Obama signed the Making Emergency Supplemental Appropriations for Border Security (P.L. 111-230) in August 2010. It placed an additional $2,000 fee on H-1B employers who employ 50 or more employees with more than 50 percent of its employees in the United States on H-1B or L visas. This law targets foreign information technology companies investing in the U.S.
Last year, the Obama administration announced 25,000 random workplace inspections of H-1B visa employers for this year—a fivefold increase over any previous year. New targeted fees and workplace disruptions are going to raise the cost of hiring skills for all American employers. But there is a bright spot on the horizon. Representative Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) introduced the Stopping Trained in America Ph.D.s from Leaving the Economy (STAPLE) Act (H.R. 399) in late January. If passed, it would allow foreign Ph.D. students who graduated from American universities in the sciences, technology, engineering, or mathematics to get an H-1B without worrying about a cap. Currently only 20,000 spots are left open for graduating foreigners. The STAPLE Act increases the cap by exempting a large number of petitioners from it. All of these quotas, regulations, and fees are designed to prevent highly skilled and educated foreign workers from adding to our economy. Ninety-nine percent of all H-1B workers have at least a bachelors degree. The remaining 1% are on the high end of the fashion or modeling agency – two industries that don’t require advanced education. Our restrictive immigration policy punishes American firms for seeking the skilled labor they require to expand. The STAPLE Act is a step in the right direction but much, like fee reduction, remains to be done. The U.S. economy has a lot of rebuilding to do after the economic destruction of recent years. We shouldn’t deny ourselves the highly skilled workers that will make that reconstitution possible.
Alex Nowrasteh is a policy analyst at the Competitive Enterprise Institute. v
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