Indian IT group says H-1B fee hike will hurt U.S. hiring
NASSCOM warns of protectionism, trade challenges and job losses
Computerworld - A U.S. Senate plan to pay for new border protection along the Mexican border by hiking H-1B fees on offshore firms was met with sharp criticism by India's largest IT group.
But what may have really inflamed offshore providers was Sen. Chuck Schumer's (D-N.Y.) characterization of their industry.
"There is a part of H-1B that is abused, and it is by companies that are not American companies or even companies that are making something," Schumer said Thursday on the Senate floor. "Rather, they are companies that take foreign folks, bring them here, and then they stay here for a few years, learn their expertise, and go back. We think we should increase the fees when they do that," he said.
India's largest IT industry group, the New Delhi-based National Association of Software and Services Companies (NASSCOM), is moving quickly to spell out the ramifications the Senate's action. It called the fee hike an "indirect form of protectionism" and said it may violate trade agreements.
"It clearly seems to be an election-driven, political move," NASSCOM President Som Mittal said in a telephone interview.
The Senate approved a $2,000 fee increase on H-1B visas to offset the $600 million cost of Mexican border security improvements. The Senate's action has to be reconciled with a similar bill in the House, which doesn't have an H-1B or L-1 fee hike.
The fee hike takes aim at foreign firms by stipulating that it only applies to those that have 50% or more of their U.S. employees on H-1B and L-1 visas. That directly hits the business model of offshore providers.
Mittal said the fee increase is closer to $4,000 per visa based on the bill's language, and it may well push offshore firms to try to move more work overseas. But Mittal's major point is that the fee is discriminatory against foreign firms -- and as U.S. firms start looking at business overseas in pursuit of President Barack Obama's goal of doubling U.S. exports, the increase could "trigger counter protectionism."
"It seems odd that foreign companies should pay for protecting U.S. borders," said Mittal, who said there was no discussion or debate about the change - "nobody ever got a chance to present a view."
Mittal said offshore firms will now have to change their business models. Most offshore firms use what is called the 80-20 model, meaning 80% of a customer's work is done offshore and 20% on-shore. As the cost goes up, the offshore firms will try to have more work completed offshore, he said.
H-1B battle
- FAQ: The new push in Congress to increase STEM visas
- Lofgren says 'toxic environment' stalls visa reform
- Infosys says it's 'target' of federal probe
- Indian IT firms are heading for a fall
- 'Massive' visa fraud alleged in lawsuit against Indian firm
- IEEE says L-1 visa not intended for outsourcers
- Charting H-1B users, as attention shifts to L-1
- India's IT firms hire U.S. workers as they fight for visas
- Indian, U.S. firms urge Obama action on visas
- Obama's H-1B answer in forum may haunt him


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