arvard Business
School’s Class of 2010 will send 900 new MBAs out into the job market, but one-third
who are non-U.S. citizens will be effectively off limits for recruiters from Bank
of America, JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs. All three
companies recruit on Harvard’s campus but now fall under new restrictions on H-1B
visas, the primary vehicle for hiring foreign students graduating from U.S. universities.
The new H-1B restrictions, which are part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act of 2009 signed into law on February 17, apply to any company receiving Troubled
Assets Relief Program funds.
If Citigroup, for instance, wants to hire Stanford University’s
top Ph.D. computer science graduate and that graduate happens to be an Indian nonresident,
Citigroup’s recruiters will find that their hands are tied because the company is
covered under the new law.
Still, Harvard’s 297 non-U.S. citizen MBAs likely will
find work elsewhere; so will the 274 non-U.S. citizen MBA graduates from MIT’s Sloan
School and the 320 non-U.S. citizen graduates from the University of Pennsylvania’s
Wharton School—40 percent of its MBA class. The foreign companies that routinely
recruit at the top U.S. business schools will welcome these MBAs, while some of
the largest and best-known U.S. companies will lose their first-choice candidates
to overseas competitors.
"Most employers receiving federal funds will not take
the risk of filing H-1B petitions because the new requirements are almost impossible
to comply with," says Jim Alexander, managing partner at Maggio & Kattar, an immigration
law firm based in Washington.
The jobs filled by H-1B visa candidates each year represent
less than one-twentieth of 1 percent of total U.S. employment, but were singled
out for special protection under the $787 billion stimulus act. In fact, the congressional
debates about this minuscule number of jobs unleashed a wave of anti-immigrant sentiment
that could threaten the entire H-1B category and deter the most talented students
and workers worldwide from looking for or accepting employment in the United States.
The anti-immigrant wave has been duly noted by the mainstream
and business press in India, which closely tracked the passage of the H-1B visa
restrictions, warning readers that fewer U.S. firms would be able to recruit Indian
science, engineering and computer specialists for work in the United States.
H-1B visa holders at U.S. companies blogged about the
anti-immigrant sentiments that fueled the restrictions and the insults they routinely
endure from those who view H-1B visa workers as "underpaid" and "subservient." With
companies relying on global talent pools to fuel growth, some anti-immigrant forces
have created a poisonous atmosphere for recruiting.
"With the H-1B restrictions in play, some jobs will
go unfilled, some will be filled with lesser candidates, and more U.S. companies
will move work overseas," says Ted Ruthizer, partner and business immigration co-chair
at Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel in New York and a lecturer at Columbia Law School.
‘Dependent’ company restrictions
The current cap on the number of H-1B visas granted each year is 65,000, which includes
5,400 set aside for candidates from Singapore and 1,400 for candidates from Chile.
An additional 20,000 H-1B visas are available for advanced-degree students graduating
from U.S. universities.
The new H-1B restrictions contained in the stimulus
act require any company that receives money under TARP to comply with onerous rules
that previously applied only to "H-1B dependent" companies, defined as those with
15 percent or more of their workers on H-1B visas.
Under the new stimulus act restrictions, the 15 percent
threshold does not apply to TARP recipients. Any company that receives federal funds
and petitions for even one H-1B visa is now covered by the dependent employer rules.
Those rules require employers to make various attestations
about their recruiting, hiring and layoff practices. A no-displacement attestation
requires the employer to state that it has not and will not lay off a U.S. worker
in a similar position within 90 days before or after filing an H-1B petition.
"In addition to the required attestation that there
have been no layoffs in similar positions, the employer must retain paperwork on
any employee in a similar position who left the company for any reason, including
voluntary quits and those fired for cause," Alexander says.
The new no-displacement requirement means a company
that laid off employees in January, before the restrictive provisions were added
to the stimulus bill, is essentially barred from filing H-1B petitions in the current
round, which begins April 1.
If the employer places an H-1B worker at a customer
site, the employer must attest that the customer has not laid off a U.S. worker
in a similar position within 90 days before or after the date of the placement.
"This means that the employer must be aware of any layoffs
at the customer’s site and must basically micromanage the customer’s labor activities—not
the best scenario for positive business relations," says Angelo Paparelli, business
immigration partner at Seyfarth Shaw, who maintains a bicoastal practice in Irvine,
California, and New York.
The new restrictions also require any employer receiving
federal funds to make a recruitment attestation that it has made a "good faith"
effort to recruit a U.S. worker for the position to be filled by the H-1B candidate.
The recruiting effort must meet industry standards, including standards for posting
and advertising the job, and must include salary offers that are as high or higher
than the salary offered to the H-1B candidate.
"The ‘good faith’ recruiting attestation requires affirmative
labor market testing on an ongoing basis," Paparelli notes.
The new restrictions also eliminate two important exemptions
from the original dependent rules. The original rules include exemptions for jobs
paying at least $60,000 a year in cash compensation and for jobs that require a
master’s degree or higher in a specialty related to the intended employment and
generally accepted by the industry as a necessary credential for the job. These
two exemptions cover many H-1B positions, but are not allowed for employers receiving
federal funds.
"The dependent employer provisions add a cost of compliance
in an already financially stressed business environment," Paparelli notes. "The
attempt is to add additional costs and hardships for employers."
Employment decision consequences
Anti-immigrant advocates continue to claim that employers can adequately fill all
H-1B jobs with available U.S. citizen employees. For years, this claim has been
undercut by labor market studies and extensive data on university enrollments. Additional
studies have documented the central role of immigrant talent in U.S. startup companies,
patent filings, technological advancement and job creation.
Deep, long-term shortcomings in the U.S. education system
have left the country dependent on foreign-born scientists, engineers, computer
specialists and other highly skilled workers to fuel the research and innovation
that drive economic growth.
"H-1B visa costs average $10,000 per candidate in government
fees and attorney costs, and employers would certainly avoid these costs if they
could," Ruthizer says.
Experts agree that solving the outright labor shortage
for some jobs and addressing the acute mismatch in skills for others will require
substantial reforms in U.S. secondary schools, the university system and training
programs.
The U.S. companies that are heavy users of H-1B visas
have poured billions of dollars into trying to improve the supply of qualified U.S.
workers. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, funded by the sale of Microsoft
stock, has invested more than $2 billion to improve U.S. secondary education, with
a focus on science and technology, plus an additional $1.7 billion for college scholarship
programs.
Intel, Oracle and other H-1B users have pumped billions
more into the U.S. education system. In addition, by law, $1,500 of the fee that
employers pay for every H-1B petition goes to scholarships and training programs
reserved for U.S. students.
In recent months, anti-immigration forces in Congress
have seized on the very limited cases of H-1B fraud as a vehicle for reducing or
banning H-1Bs.
"Congress buys the idea that these employees are brought
in to work for lower wages," Paparelli says. "That’s a false perception.
"The vast majority of employers using these visas are
law-abiding employers who incur high fees and costs and additional risks and subject
themselves to criminal liability because they need these workers and cannot find
suitable employee here."
Employers have worked for years to increase the cap
for H-1B visas from its current level, which experts agree is inadequate. The new
H-1B restrictions signal a serious setback for this goal and for the broader call
to let labor markets and business needs drive recruiting decisions.
"Cap removal will now be an uphill battle," Ruthizer
says.
"We’ve heard discussions about applying labor certification
requirements for all H-1B visas," Alexander says. "That would greatly reduce the
number of H-1Bs."
The Department of Labor certification process now entails
long waits for a review with additional delays stretching into years if there are
any questions. "By that time, the business opportunity has evaporated," Alexander
says.
The new H-1B restrictions will remain in effect for
two years.
"Employers need to make sure that they are in contact
with their congressional delegation and that Congress understands that limitations
on foreign workers will simply mean that more jobs will be moved offshore, for example,
to Canada, where the immigration restrictions are not as tight," Alexander says.
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