Title: High Skill Immigration
1High Skill Immigration Innovation Capturing
The Best Brightestor Offshoring Americas
KnowledgeOctober 25, 2006Technology,
Innovation Americas PrimacyCouncil on Foreign
Relations
- Ron Hira, Ph.D., P.E.
- Assistant Professor of Public Policy Research
Associate - Rochester Institute of Technology Economic
Policy Institute - rhira_at_mail.rit.edu
- 757-564-0215
2Three Uses of High Skill Guest-worker Visas
- Brain Capture
- Skilled workers use non-immigrant guest-worker
programs as a bridge to immigration - Temporary Labor Mobility
Driven by Offshoring - Knowledge transfer programs shift tasks to
offshore locations - Lower cost foreign labor for service delivery
on-site to US clients
3H-1B Visa
- Specialty Occupations
- Requires Bachelors degree or equivalent
experience - Visa stay up to 6 years
- 400,000 H-1B holders in US
- Protections for US Workers
- Annual quota for new petitions
- 65k 20k (MS or PhD from US Univs) exemptions
- Wage parity Largely ineffective
4H-1B Visa
- Misreporting by Press
- Getting an H-1B requires an employer to attest
that it can't find a U.S. worker - A1 story by June Kronholz, Wall Street Journal,
June 27, 2006 - Bills in Congress to Increase Quotas
- Major lobbying by tech industry
- Bill Gates, Scott McNealy, etc.
- Support from President Bush
- Feb 06 speech to 3M
5L-1 Visa
- Intra-company Transfer
- L-1A - managers and executives 7 years
- L-1B - specialized skills - 5 years
- 65,000 L-1s issued in FY 05
- 9 of Top 10 Petitioning Companies Specialize in
Computer IT Offshore Outsourcing from India - Tata Consultancy, Cognizant Technology Solutions,
Wipro Technologies, Hewlett Packard, I-Flex
Solutions, IBM Global Services, Information
Systems Technology, Syntel Incorporated, and
Satyam Computer Services
6L-1 Visa
- Share of L-1B Petitions for Workers from India Up
Significantly - 2002 India 10
- 2005 India 48
- Since 2004 L-1B gt L-1A
- No Protections for US Workers
- Recent law limits use by body shoppers
7Brain Capture ScenarioBridge to Immigration
- Foreign Student Comes to US for Graduate Studies
- Foreign Student Wants to Stay in US
- Company applies for H-1B work visa
- Company applies for Green Card
- 3-5 year wait time traditionally
- Quota inadequate so much longer backlog
8Knowledge Transfer Scenario
- Company Wants to Transfer Specific Tasks from US
to Overseas Operations - Brings foreign workers into US (generally on
L-1visa) - US worker trains foreign worker
- Foreign worker returns to country of origin and
task migrates with him - US worker laid off or re-assigned
9On-site Offshore Outsourcing Scenario
- Company Brings in Lower-Cost High-Skill Worker to
Deliver Services On-Site in US - H-1B or L-1 visa used
- Advantages
- Lower labor cost
- Better management of offshore team
- Training
- Business model for most major IT offshore
outsourcing firms - Cognizant, Infosys, Tata Consultancy, Wipro, etc.
10Visas Vital for On-site OO Firms
- Firms Report in SEC Filings
- Changes in US visa laws are a significant risk
- Vast majority of workers in US are on H-1B or L-1
visas - Infosys, Cognizant, Wipro, Satyam
- Visa Application Fees Large Enough to Affect PL
Reporting to Investors - E.g., Patni, Infosys
11On-site OO Business Model
- Tata has about 8,000 employees in North America,
primarily in the U.S., and about 7,200 of them
are here on some kind of visa. Among its U.S.
workers, about 65 have H-1Bs, and the remainder
hold L-1 visas, said spokesman Victor Chayet. - He added that many of Tata's U.S.-based
employees are graduates of universities in India
and that only a handful ever seek permanent
residency here. The company doesn't discourage
workers from applying for green cards, but its
service delivery model is based on the ability to
move people from country to country as needed.
"Keeping that fluid workforce is to our benefit,"
Chayet said. - - Patrick Thibodeau, H-1B backers want bigger
increase in cap, ComputerWorld, November 29,
2004
12On-site OO Business Model
- Our wage per employee is 20-25 lesser than US
wage for a similar employee. Typically, for a TCS
employee with five years experience, the annual
cost to the company is 60,000-70,000, while a
local American employee might cost
80,000-100,000. This (labour arbitrage) is a
fact of doing work onsite. It's a fact that
Indian IT companies have an advantage here and
there's nothing wrong in that. - - Phiroz Vandrevala, Executive VP, Tata
Consultancy Services, quoted in, Shelley Singh,
US Visas are not a TCS-specific issue, Business
World, June 30, 2003.
13H-1B Prevailing Wages
- Says Sanyogita Mukerjee (name changed on
request), who works at a top-five Indian software
company with a contract to develop complex
software systems at International Monetary Fund
in Washington, "I get an annual cost-to-company
salary of 46,800 and a net salary of 36,300,
despite being in the software industry for more
than five years. An American with a similar
experience gets around 80,000 a year." - Mukerjee is not alone. Her company has H1-B and
L1 employees in New York, Chicago, Atlanta,
Boston and San Francisco working with some of the
best brands in the world, and almost everyone has
a similar grouse. She said her company told her
she is being paid at prevailing wages. - - Sachin Kalbag, H-1B visa holders get paid less
than Americans Report, DNA India, Sept. 8, 2006
14Brain Capture SqueezeFY05 Approved H-1B
Applications
Source R. Hira Analysis US Dept of Labor LCA
Database www.flcdatacenter.com
15Emerging Global IT Services Business Model
Dollar figures in millions Retrieved from
Reuters.com on November 13, 2005
16Infosys Still Dependent on On-Site Revenues
Source R. Hira Analysis US Dept of Labor LCA
Database www.flcdatacenter.com
17WTO GATS (Mode 4) Guest-worker Visa Programs
- Developing Countries Pushing Hard
- View quotas and prevailing wages as non-tariff
barriers to trade - 70 of revenues for On-site OO firms derived
from H-1B and L-1 use (Hira 2004) - Congress
- Singapore Chile FTA new H-1B visas
- Australia FTA did not include H-1B
- Instead new E-3 visa created 10k cap
- USTR
- Encouraging US industry to lobby for
liberalization
18Innovation Implications
- Knowledge Transfer a Body Contact Sport
- Learning on most advanced equipment and most
sophisticated customer market - Indian H-1Bs with US experience are sought after
in Indian job market - Accelerate offshore transfer speed
- Brain Capture Squeezed Out
- Increasing share of H-1B cap being used by
On-site OO - Better job opportunities back home
19Innovation Implications
- Impact on US Workers and Potential US Workers
- Direct competition for jobs that must be done in
US - Shift into non-H-1B occupations
- US National Innovation System
- Accumulation of knowledge goes to foreign workers
- National capacity to innovate
- Loss of spillovers
- e.g., next generation of entrepreneurs
- Creating competitors