AP
March 18, 2015
The
executive chairman at Google urged Congress on Wednesday to increase
the number of high-skilled work visas made available to foreigners and
to deal with other immigration
issues later on.
Eric
Schmidt spoke Wednesday at the American Enterprise Institute, a
conservative think tank. Schmidt said he believes the United States is
better off having more immigration,
not less, but he particularly is focused on allowing more immigrants
into the U.S. with specialized technical skills.
"In
the long list of stupid policies of the U.S. government, I think our
attitude toward immigration has got to be near the top," Schmidt said in
answering a question
about the biggest policy change he would like to see the federal
government make.
"We
take very, very smart people, bring them into the country, give them a
diploma and kick them out where they go on to create companies that
compete with us," Schmidt
said. "Brilliant strategy."
Schmidt
said that increasing the number of H-1B visas, a program that's
separate from the student visa program, would grow the economy because
many immigrants will go
on to become lawful permanent residents and start their own businesses
and hire workers. He also said he believes a majority of lawmakers from
both parties agree on this point, which is why they should deal with
other aspects of immigration reform separately.
A
bill sponsored by Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah would expand the
current annual cap on H-1B visas from 65,000 to between 115,000 and
195,000 visas depending upon
market condition and demand. But a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing
on Tuesday reinforced that some top lawmakers are strongly opposed to
expanding the program. They argued that the U.S. has plenty of
high-skilled workers, but companies would rather look
elsewhere because it's cheaper.
"Over
the years the program has become a government-assisted way for
employers to bring in cheaper foreign labor, and now it appears these
foreign workers take over, rather
than complement, the U.S. workforce," said the committee's chairman,
Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa.
Republican
Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama said American schools are graduating
twice as many students specializing in science, technology, engineering
and math than there
are jobs to fill in those specialties.
"It has nothing to do with trying to find the best and brightest," Sessions said of the H-1B visa program's proposed expansion.
Schmidt
served as CEO at Google for a decade and his role now includes
government outreach. He is also serving on a task force the Democratic
National Committee organized
to help it examine what went wrong in the 2014 midterm elections.
Schmidt
took on a wide range of questions for about an hour. He voiced concerns
about the government attempting to regulate the Internet.
"It's
so difficult to predict how quickly this thing moves, and many of the
problems that people have can be simply solved by technology that people
are inventing," Schmidt
said.
He
also said that he still believes a college education is critical for
the vast majority of young people and that stories of success like those
of college dropouts Steve
Jobs or Bill Gates are "cherry-picked" exceptions. Most people,
including himself, had little idea at age 18 what they wanted to do in
life.
"Better
to have them in college than at large," he joked before turning
serious. "The vast majority of people do very well by going to college."
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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