Wall Street Journal
By Marie-Astrid Langer
September 18, 2015
Fwd.us,
a lobbying group created by Mark Zuckerberg and other tech founders, is
trying to get immigration reform on the agenda of the U.S. presidential
campaign.
Not the kind of immigration that has dominated the two Republican debates – the kind of immigration Silicon Valley relies on.
“Attracting
entrepreneurs and human capital is critical to the tech community,”
said Todd Schulte, president of fwd.us during a conference call on
Thursday, strategically
timed for the day after the second Republican debate.
Immigration
has taken on a negative connotation in the presidential campaign
recently, with Republican presidential hopeful Donald Trump calling for
immigrants to be deported.
On
behalf of the tech community, Mr. Schulte is calling for more
high-skilled workers to be able to work in the U.S. “We believe it’s
important that the cap should be
raised to reflect the needs of today’s economy and market,” Mr. Schulte
said. Fwd.us’ other founders include Microsoft Corp.MSFT -1.77% founder
Bill Gates, Yahoo Inc.YHOO -0.62% CEO Marissa Mayer and LinkedIn
co-founder Reid Hoffman.
Tech companies frequently say that the current immigration system is holding them back, Mr. Schulte said.
Mr.
Schulte emphasized that foreign workers are vital for the tech sector
because they fill a rising gap in demand for graduates in science, math
and engineering. The
number of U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents with graduate
degrees in electrical engineering dropped by 5% for PhD programs and by
11% for master’s degrees between 1995 and 2013, according to a recently
published study by the National Foundation
for American Policy, a nonprofit focusing on immigration-related
issues.
Silicon
Valley is a major user of H-1B visas, which enable companies to hire
highly-skilled foreign workers. Last month, Mr. Trump attacked the
program (and called out
Facebook Inc.FB +0.06% founder Mr. Zuckerberg) because it lowers wages
for Americans by hiring cheaper foreign workers, he argued. Mr. Trump
also wants job openings to be offered to unemployed Americans first
before they can be filled by foreigners.
Mr.
Schulte is calling for a reform of the H-1B visa program. In 1990,
Congress passed legislation capping the number of employment-based green cards at 140,000 and H-1B visas at 65,000 a year, and they have not budged since. There are
20,000 additional visas for foreigners who obtained graduate degrees
from American universities. This year, the H-1B allocation was filled
within the first week of applications.
Immigration
advocates often criticize the low quotas, saying they present a very
small funnel for people who have been educated in the US, resulting in
many highly-qualified
foreign students leaving.
Mr.
Schulte stressed the idea of startup visas for foreigners wanting to
start a company in the U.S., a niche not covered by current
work-visa-regulation. “We don’t have
a visa for entrepreneurs (and) we are trying to fix that right now,”
Mr. Schulte said.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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