Orlando Sentinel (Florida, Opinion)
By Rosario Marin
March 28, 2016
All
too often, the topic of immigration reform is mentioned in the same
breath as "social justice," as though one is merely an extension of the
other's moral imperative. To do so is to exclude
a careful consideration of the myriad productive components, and to
therefore fundamentally misunderstand immigration as an indelible and
invaluable mainstay of the American economy. Indeed, to understand the
importance of immigration for the American economic
system, one must attempt an understanding of its relationship with the
U.S. economic model, the factors that drive and support it, and the
misinformation that seeks to misrepresent it.
Few
Americans today are unaware of the foundational role immigration has
played in accelerating our country's growth throughout the early
settlement and industrial eras. As expanding industrial
production spurred a need for increased manual labor in the late 18th
and early 19th centuries, immigrants bridged the labor gap and fed the
then-nascent notion of an American dream.
In
1997, Congress published a report to analyze the demographic, economic
and fiscal consequences of immigration, and found that, overwhelmingly,
immigration yielded a net economic gain by
increasing the wages of higher-skilled workers and lowering the prices
for goods and services produced through their labor.
Today,
the landscape has shifted, but the need remains. The dominant economic
trends in the U.S. are more reliant on specialized knowledge and
advanced skill sets than manual labor, and there,
too, immigrants are bridging the gap.
According
to the Partnership for a New American Economy, from 1996 to 2011, the
rate at which immigrants started new businesses grew by more than 50
percent, and the same rate for native-born
Americans declined by 10 percent to the lowest in 30 years. What's
more, those immigrants' businesses employ 10 percent of Americans
working for private companies.
Temporary
visas for highly skilled workers, known as H-1Bs, help America's
leading industries access the specialized talent they need to innovate
and grow. The rapidly expanding and evolving
needs of highly technical professions — vital across most industries —
are experiencing a critical STEM (science, technology, engineering and
math) skills shortage. H-1B visas are an essential resource to bridge
the gap for jobs like data management and analysis,
cloud computing and mobile app development, and they keep operations
and innovation moving forward while we address our domestic STEM
shortage at the systemic level.
Take Mike Krieger, the Brazilian-born co-founder of Instagram, who studied symbolic systems at
Stanford University before
creating his famous mobile app. Without an H-1B visa, Krieger could not
have remained in the U.S. after college, and he might never have gone on
to develop his renowned app.
"It
took less time to build Instagram than it did for me to get my work visa," attests Krieger, who continues to operate Instagram, a
200-employee, $35 billion Silicon Valley company.
Despite
their enormous contribution to the U.S. economy, the debate over
immigrants is perennially and puzzlingly reduced to the question of
deportation. In an effort to discredit them, the
leading opponents of these valuable and necessary visa programs — most
notable among them Republican presidential hopeful Donald Trump —
misrepresent and mischaracterize the program as "rife with abuses." But
the need for increased program oversight and enforcement
can hardly nullify the important role H-1Bs play in maintaining the
operational vitality of our nation's businesses.
Each
year on April 1, the U.S. issues only 65,000 visas, a cap that is
reached in less than one day owing to the hundreds of thousands of
applications submitted by businesses seeking talented
professionals. When that window opens again this week, we will once
more turn away thousands of the world's best and brightest, who will be
forced to seek employment from among America's competitors.
Of
these highly skilled and qualified applicants, the majority are
graduates of American universities. Nearly 80 percent of full-time U.S.
graduate students in electrical engineering are
international students, as are more than 70 percent of graduate
students in computer science. Our leading businesses continue to cry out
for workers with these advanced, technical skill sets, and although we
are willing to educate foreigners to attain the
skills our businesses need, we are as yet unwilling to do what we must
to retain that talent here in the U.S.
Immigration
— both permanent and temporary — is a linchpin of U.S. economic
progress, American values, and national competitiveness. We must ask our
legislators to eschew political and personal
dividers to support these vital programs. The sooner we embrace the
global talent pool of tomorrow, the sooner we can benefit from its
potential.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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