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US To Ease Visas for Skilled Indian Workers as Modi Visits (reuters.com) 118

The Biden administration will make it easier for Indians to live and work in the United States, using this week's state visit by Prime Minister Narendra Modi to help some skilled workers enter or remain in the country, Reuters reported Thursday, citing people familiar with the matter. From the report: The State Department could announce as soon as Thursday that a small number of Indians and other foreign workers on H-1B visas will be able to renew those visas in the U.S., without having to travel abroad, one of the sources said, part of a pilot program that could be expanded in coming years. Indian citizens are by far the most active users of the U.S. H-1B program and made up 73% of the nearly 442,000 H-1B workers in fiscal year 2022.

[...] Each year, the U.S. government makes 65,000 H-1B visas available to companies seeking skilled foreign workers, along with an additional 20,000 visas for workers with advanced degrees. The visas last for three years and can be renewed for another three years. The companies using the most H-1B workers in recent years include the Indian-based Infosys and Tata Consultancy Services as well as Amazon, Alphabet and Meta in the U.S., according to U.S. government data. The ability for some of the temporary foreign workers to renew visas in the U.S. would free up resources for visa interviews in consulates abroad, the spokesperson said. The pilot program would also include some workers with L-1 visas, which are available to people transferring within a company to a position in the U.S., one of the sources said.

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US To Ease Visas for Skilled Indian Workers as Modi Visits

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  • by h0m3rs1mps0n ( 6457364 ) on Thursday June 22, 2023 @03:03PM (#63624032)
    Way to drive down wages of US workers!
    • Are they driving down wages or just taking the high paying jobs?

  • Awesome (Score:4, Insightful)

    by CoolDiscoRex ( 5227177 ) on Thursday June 22, 2023 @03:04PM (#63624038) Homepage

    In a tough job market too.

    Thank you, Joe.

  • hard to believe (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 22, 2023 @03:08PM (#63624052)

    It is hard to believe that there are no qualified US Persons to fill 442,000 jobs. This is just wage suppression in the US. Plus India is corrupt as fuck, are those H1-Bs even qualified or did they cheat their way through?

    • 80 hours main 100 hours crunch for $60K in CA!

      • by bn-7bc ( 909819 )
        80h/week welp, that is like 2 full time jobs here in Norway the US is fucked up, ok Norway does have it's own issues ( no one is perfect) but at least we dont work people to death as a master of course.
    • Re:hard to believe (Score:5, Interesting)

      by TheRealMindChild ( 743925 ) on Thursday June 22, 2023 @03:25PM (#63624150) Homepage Journal

      This has been the goal of H1-B IT hires since the 90's. The rich and politically connected love it, which is why you won't see it reigned in anytime soon

    • by ranton ( 36917 )

      It is hard to believe that there are no qualified US Persons to fill 442,000 jobs. This is just wage suppression in the US. Plus India is corrupt as fuck, are those H1-Bs even qualified or did they cheat their way through?

      No one who has to hire senior IT staff in the US have a hard time believing there are no qualified US citizens to fill those 442,000 jobs. The global IT market was $8.5 trillion in 2022, and the US represents about a quarter of that. It would be shocking if a country with 5% of the world's population owning 25% of the IT industry didn't need significant foreign workers to support the industry.

      • It would be shocking if a country with 5% of the world's population owning 25% of the IT industry didn't need significant foreign workers to support the industry.

        ^^^ This.

        I came here to post that. Anyone trying to hire skilled IT staff and software developers understands perfectly well that the US simply cannot supply all of the people we need. It's not a matter of pay... top tech companies can and do pay $500k, $700k and even more, and still can't hire enough. The recent layoffs seem to contradict this, but they really don't: the fact is that big tech was only able to sustain the pandemic hiring binge by lowering hiring standards. The layoffs were a partial fix (

    • Plenty of qualified individuals. But why hire them when you can import someone for 2/3 the cost?

      • If they're from TCS, the answer is "because they take 5 times as long to complete a task with mediocre results."
    • India truly is corrupt as fuck, but it will be American companies taking advantage of this.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Increasing wages do contribute to inflation... But in this case, it's not the working and middle class wages that are rising in line with or faster than inflation. It's the rich.

      Inflation is caused by supply issues, due to lack of labour to make stuff... But in this case, the supply issues are to do with global trade, the pandemic, and animosity to China.

  • remove the job lock to th H1-B

    • and the complete lack of anti-trust law enforcement that'll accomplish nothing. If you're going to wish for something you're not going to get just demand an H1-B tax of 8-10x the going rate for the employee and use that money to subsidize public Universities for Americans to retrain. If H1-Bs are that critical like everyone says companies will pay it, right? And then we can train up Americans to take the jobs so we don't need H1-Bs anymore.
  • by Midnight_Falcon ( 2432802 ) on Thursday June 22, 2023 @03:10PM (#63624060)
    India's purchasing of Russian oil has allowed the war in Ukraine to continue. As a democracy, helping totalitarian Russia should never have been a go to. Their approach of neutrality is to maximize their own profit, as we can see with this deal. I just sure hope the US and the rest of the democratic world received something in return, notably actually choking Russia off from foreign currency and funding its war machine.
    • India is nuclear capable and a thorn in china's side. There's political reasons we get along with them....
    • Russian military advances do not rely on India's purchase of oil to continue.
      • So you're saying that if India stops buying oil (presently 51% of russia's oil export), and 30-35% of the entire budget of Russia comes from oil, that a hit of 15% of the entire federal budget won't hurt? How will they pay for chips and other equipment? What happens when the oligarchs start getting upset they aren't making money anymore? In a totalitarian state (or even a medieval monarchy), losing the quiescence of the elites is one of the primary drivers of regime change.

        You understand the history th

  • by ctilsie242 ( 4841247 ) on Thursday June 22, 2023 @03:15PM (#63624104)

    If someone is so valuable that they have to be brought in over US people, why do they have to be on a visa where they are deported if they get fired? Instead, if someone is that valuable, they should be granted a permanent resident, "green card" visa, and if they get abused by an employer, they can jump somewhere else. The H-1B system is just rife with tales about abuse, and does nothing to benefit the country as a whole.

    • How do you vote? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by rsilvergun ( 571051 )
      What criteria do you use to select a political candidate to vote for? What issues are more important to you then your economic well-being? Are there social issues that do not directly impact your civil rights or the civil rights of people you know or care about but that influence your voting decisions?

      There's a reason why America has a never-ending cavalcade of moral panics and why culture War issues are all you hear about. They're distractions from economic concerns.

      Now it's important to distinguis
      • I vote for whomever the Republican candidate is. Not because I like the Republican Party platform, but because I despise the Democrats.

        I would literally vote for Satan himself before voting for another Democrat (I voted for Clinton against Bush Sr.).

        • by GlennC ( 96879 )

          This, and the corresponding fervor over "Team Blue," is exactly why the United States is heading toward Civil War 2.0.

          The only thing keeping a lid on it is that the "Second Amendment Solution" brigade is too cheap to use their own gear and too scared to do anything but fly their flags upside-down.

        • You're a huge part of the problem. Instead of voting for a candidate, you vote because they have an (R) after their name. That has to be the stupidest reason to vote for someone.

    • by ccguy ( 1116865 )

      If someone is so valuable that they have to be brought in over US people, why do they have to be on a visa where they are deported if they get fired?

      While the system is currently broken, "straight to green card" is a recipe for fraud as well.
      I'd make some changes (including extending the grace period from 2 to 6 month, and putting a cap on how long you can wait to get a green card). But nothing wrong with "know your immigrants".
      Really, someone that doesn't integrate well and that has residency rights is a problem in any country. Plenty of examples in Europe. The US, being so huge, can tolerate bigger numbers, but the same strategy would lead to the sa

  • More H-1Bs, especially with a country who will happily hand over secrets to Russia, and an economy in free-fall. When in doubt, and you have a fire, why not throw some gasoline on it. Perhaps some powdered titanium and metals, so it can't be extinguished via normal means?

    Does Biden really want DeSantis or Trump to replace him? A shitty economy during an election season even killed George Bush I's Presidency when he was considered a war hero. People will be throwing the bums out when they are unemployed

    • ...George Bush I's Presidency when he was considered a war hero.

      You do know that he earned a Purple Heart and a Silver Star early in the Leyte Campaign back in '44. He wasn't just considered a war hero, he was one.
    • I voted for his first term.

      I voted against his second term because he invaded Panama.

  • Mentality (Score:5, Interesting)

    by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Thursday June 22, 2023 @03:29PM (#63624166) Homepage

    In my experience, there is a more general problem with Indian workers. Individual exceptions apply, but in general: they do what they are told. Exactly. Only. No initiative.

    You cannot say: create X. Instead, you have to specify *exactly* what you want, and totally micromanage the process, to the point that you could have done it yourself.

    This is apparently just how they are taught. It's a cultural thing, and some can break out if it. However, in general, I do not understand why any Western company wants employees like this...

    • by ugen ( 93902 ) on Thursday June 22, 2023 @04:00PM (#63624290)

      Wait, let me get this clear - so these are the employees that "do what they are told" and you are wondering "why any Western company wants employees like this"? Hmm.

    • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Thursday June 22, 2023 @04:41PM (#63624442)
      It genuinely surprises me that there's anyone left on this forum so sheltered they haven't seen this trend.

      Companies have been working hard to identify their "rock star" employees, document what they do, break it down into smaller processes, and make that person easily replaceable.

      Corporations want predictability and interchangeability. You're not a person, you're a "human resource". MBAs have spend decades perfecting this process breakdown. If you think you're not in their sites it's either because you're old and they haven't gotten around to you, you're working for too small a company to afford MBAs or they already did it and you're just suffering from survivorship bias...

      None of us is special to them. We're all replaceable. We're all just cogs in their machine. And on the off chance they notice a specialty cog they can't do without they get to work swapping it out. They don't care how much that costs either, because whatever the cost having an irreplaceable employee always costs more.
    • I'm going to challenge this a little bit.

      When outsourcing to India, I've very much always got what I paid for. If you go cheap, yeah -- it's exactly what you say: you better be exact because they'll probably do the wrong thing when reading between lines, and you better review the hell out of it and plan for iteration to ensure you got what you wanted. The cheap places usually have one senior-level person dictating requirements to a ton of juniors who do the work and it shows.

      Spend more and you'll find quali

    • I don't think that's true. I've worked with many Indians who are very creative and capable of directing complex projects. They had wit, humor, and a great education. Hire brahmins. Just don't do it in a way that is discriminatory or illegal.

    • Because they probably don't make demands about what the company should do about the environment, where they should sell products and other things, based on their personal political beliefs. They probably STFU and do their fucking jobs and let management do theirs.

    • That is correct, for most of them, not all.. there are a handful of exceptions... however....

  • by ardmhacha ( 192482 ) on Thursday June 22, 2023 @03:36PM (#63624188)

    "a small number of Indians and other foreign workers on H-1B visas will be able to renew those visas in the U.S., without having to travel abroad,"

    That part of the H1-B process is very silly. There are other problems with the whole system which would be resolved by having the annual quota going to the highest salary offers rather by lottery

    • by migos ( 10321981 )
      As a Canadian I never had to renew my H1 visa abroad, so I don't think allowing them to renew in US really hurts anything. For those that are bashing H1-B, I'm paying more taxes than 99% of Americans, and I'm a US citizen now.
  • Well fuck (Score:5, Funny)

    by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Thursday June 22, 2023 @03:40PM (#63624204)
    Not surprised in the slightest. I'll still vote for Biden, the alternative is fascism. But given that I've got family struggling to find work in IT while their companies hire every H1-B they can get their hands on it's infuriating.

    I know logically the GOP would do this and worse, but fuck man, just, just fuck.... We need Unions. If IT workers had a national Union with strong membership we could bring the votes to stop this. But we don't. So we gets nothing.

    I'm so fucking tired...
    • by Tyr07 ( 8900565 )

      You are voting facism.

      • by migos ( 10321981 )
        You have no critical thinking skills.
      • no, no I did not.

        Whatever else you think of Biden, good or bad, he believes in Democracy. Almost to a fault.

        It's stupidly obvious the GOP is trying to seize power before the boomers die or hit nursing homes and their party becomes unelectable and irrelevant. DeSantis is literally creating a private army in Florida. You don't do that for shits and giggles, you do that when you're planning a coup.
    • by ccguy ( 1116865 )

      I've got family struggling to find work in IT while their companies

      What do you mean by "their" companies?
      H1B processing is expensive, by the way, and you have to pay prevailing wages.

      I know logically the GOP would do this and worse, but fuck man, just, just fuck.... We need Unions.

      I hear the GOP and their voters are quite pro unions.

      • 1%ers have got to me too. I call the company that hires me "my company" like that's a thing.

        Once you get your opponent to use your terms you've won. Like how we call the right wing extremists that run the GOP "conservative", or how we use "pro-choice" and "pro-life" to discuss abortion because life & choice are both good things, thus ensuring it remains a wedge issue to divide the working class for eternity.

        It's hard to catch every case of that though, and I fall for it too. Thanks for pointing
    • Sounds like you are blurting out CNN/MSNBC sound bites. The H1B program fits the definition of fascism very well. Govt & Private enterprise working together to fuck over the citizenry.
  • by t0qer ( 230538 ) on Thursday June 22, 2023 @03:41PM (#63624210) Homepage Journal

    H1-B should be a path to citizenship, why?

    It would eliminate the abuses of the system. Let me explain.

    H1-B abuses exist because of the "Find a new job in 30 days if you get fired, or go back to India" While it's true, TaTa consulting charges $250k a year for an engineer, after they take their cut that engineer is lucky to be making $60k. I've seen it happen soooo many times.

    So in reality, we need 3 things to happen.

    1. Ban consulting companies like Tata and Infosys from playing the H1-B lottery.
    2. Eliminate the "30 days" option.
    3. Give H1-B's the same rights and recourse Americans have.

    • by ccguy ( 1116865 )
      What path to citizenship do you suggest, if any, for foreign workers that come to the US?
      They're workers but also people; they need to plan for the rest of their lives. The current rules, while bad, are reasonably clear. You can more or less expect to become an American, if you want to, in around 10 years from the very beginning until you get your passport. Much more if Indian, which is a different topic.
    • by migos ( 10321981 )
      H1-B is still a path to citizenship. That's how I got mine (as Canadian). I agree with #1. #2 should be increased to 90 days, but not forever because this is a "working visa" and can't overstay your visa without jobs. #3: I don't see a need. They still enjoy the due-process, and infrastructure and services. They just can't vote or run for office and won't get to stay in US if they commit crimes. They can get the full rights after becoming US citizen. Before that H1-Bs will pay social security and
    • by khchung ( 462899 )

      H1-B should be a path to citizenship, why?

      It would eliminate the abuses of the system.

      End of discussion. The H1-B is created to be abused, any proposal to eliminate abuse has no hope of getting through the best congress money can buy.

  • H1-B temporary visas are a problem. We know this. The program suppresses US salaries by allowing the temporary import of semi-qualified workers to fill available jobs. It allows companies to treat the imported workers poorly (they can easily be replaced). The program is abused by specialty consulting service companies that exist to make a profit off of exploitation.

    If workers are needed to fill industry needs, the government should open up an expedited citizenship path. Have needed qualifications? Mov

  • There is no abuse of a system when there is no system to abuse. In a prefect world, H1-Bs would seem like a positive, but I don't think it's worth the cheating, the games, the uncertainty, the wage depression and the simple fact that it's clearly not "America first". But I'm all about simplicity at the sacrifice of "features". Gasp. Such blasphemy. When you have have such systems in place, you also have to administer them (cost) and police them (more cost). I just don't think it's worth it.

    I'd acce
  • There's a very negative sentiment on slashdot about the H1-B, likely from the heydays of the abuse from bodyshops. H1-B is a sound program as long as they bring in real talents that often turn into model citizens. The consulting company abuses have been clamped down but we need to hit them harder. People that are complaining about H1-Bs probably haven't been in positions to hire tech talents. Really good STEM talents are hard to come by, especially for non-FAANG companies.
    • Every time I've seen H-1Bs, they have been used for abuse, cheap slaves. $40,000 for a full stack developer, who replaces a $180k guy is one example. The work I see from them is shoddy at best, and they know how to slam the dagger right between the ribs when your back is turned, as their best skill point. Throw them anything that they have not "mugged" for, such as Linux stuff, and they will either turn it back at you, run to management and say they are being abused, or find some other way to shirk tasks

  • With all the government interference, it's just a terrible profession. Other 'professionals' make a lot more money and they do not have to face this H1B bullshit. Why don't they H1B lawyers & doctors? Before anyone says how much money they make in it, without the importation of cheap labor over the last 25 years, we'd probably be making 2x-3x what we made during this period.
  • I hope the clout is worth it....

  • Its either import the workers or export the jobs - your choice. Here are the top 5 countries with recent STEM graduates from Statistica. China - 4.7 million India - 2.6 million USA - 680K Russia - 56K Iran - 335K (surprising) Incidentally here are some immigrant Indian CEOs of major tech firms Microsoft - Satya Nadella electrical engineer Alphabet(Google) - Sundar Pichai materials engineering Adobe - Chantanu Narayen computer science IBM -Arvin Krisna electrical engineering
  • Pandering to Modi? Why would Modi like this? It increases the brain drain from India. What Modi would like is increasing outsourcing to India. This seems like a dumb move.

  • Great, now swarms of unqualified people will stream into the US and mess up all of our IT systems even more until nothing functions even more so than today. We will pay them tons of rupees to destroy more technology is the name of Ram and "revert" us back to the partitions between storage systems until nothing works.

  • https://www.petition2congress.... [petition2congress.com] #SB403

  • The particular visa is past due a major reform. It has been abused to death by companies which had more than enough time for their lawyers to find all the loopholes.

    (Just look at the list of where these visas go: https://www.myvisajobs.com/Rep... [myvisajobs.com])

    But in this particular case, I actually agree with the decision.

    Why?

    Requiring people who are legally here to visit an overseas consulate to renew a visa?
    Having them visit Mexico (or another place), and possibly be stuck there for extended amounts of time due to bur

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  • Fuck Joe Biden. That steaming pile of dementia doesn't give two shits what he does to the American people -- he has his money, so fuck everyone else. Wait, that is literally ALL politicians.

    A solution to our corrupt pieces of shit would be to pay them minimum wage while in office, and have NO access to ANY other money. No investments, no donations, NOTHING. Then anyone looking to get into office to make money is shit out of luck. If you do make money while in office -- that is a hanging.

    The government shou

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