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Bill gates urges for more H1 B's

Saturday, March 10, 2007

In his latest speech addressing Congress Bill Gates asked congress to increase the number of H1 visas issued to improve the technology standards and encourage innovations throughout the world.

This is the part of the speech regarding H1B's :-

To remain competitive in the global economy, we must build on the success of such schools and commit to an ambitious national agenda for education. Government and businesses can both play a role. Companies must advocate for strong education policies and work with schools to foster interest in science and mathematics and to provide an education that is relevant to the needs of business. Government must work with educators to reform schools and improve educational excellence.

American competitiveness also requires immigration reforms that reflect the importance of highly skilled foreign-born employees. Demand for specialized technical skills has long exceeded the supply of native-born workers with advanced degrees, and scientists and engineers from other countries fill this gap.

This issue has reached a crisis point. Computer science employment is growing by nearly 100,000 jobs annually. But at the same time studies show that there is a dramatic decline in the number of students graduating with computer science degrees.

The United States provides 65,000 temporary H-1B visas each year to make up this shortfall -- not nearly enough to fill open technical positions.

Permanent residency regulations compound this problem. Temporary employees wait five years or longer for a ``green card.'' During that time they can't change jobs, which limits their opportunities to contribute to their employer's success and overall economic growth.

Last year, reform on this issue stalled as Congress struggled to address border security and undocumented immigration. As lawmakers grapple with those important issues once again, I urge them to support changes to the H-1B visa program that allow American businesses to hire foreign-born scientists and engineers when they can't find the homegrown talent they need. Reforming the green card program to make it easier to retain highly skilled professionals is also necessary.

We should also encourage foreign students to stay here after they graduate. Half of this country's doctoral candidates in computer science come from abroad. It's not in our national interest to educate them here but then send them home.

During the past 30 years, U.S. innovation has been the catalyst for the digital information revolution. If the United States is to remain a global economic leader, we must foster an environment that enables a new generation to dream up innovations, regardless of where they were born. Talent in this country is not the problem -- the issue is political will.

2 comments:

Anonymous March 11, 2007 at 1:18 AM  

NO MORE H1-B'S! The H1-B program has already just about singlehandedly killed the domestically grown tech industry. I've taught engineering classes at tech colleges for almost two decades now, and the classes for me and other professors is now less than half what it used to be-- smart students don't want to go into computer science and engineering for obvious reasons, they know they'll be working like dogs and STILL not get decent pay or job security, due to outsourcing and the H1-B program.

End this ridiculous program now. Or sharply curtail H1-B, so that we can actually encourage our own students to pursue careers in technical fields!

Anonymous March 11, 2007 at 1:20 AM  

And BTW, I hope the Presidential and Congressional hopefuls for 2008 are listening up, loud and clear. Hell hath no fury like professionals scorned.

Any political figure who supports an expansion of the H1-B program-- rather than a sharp reduction, as is needed-- will be targeted, and see their political careers destroyed before them.

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