the positive side of immigration green cards, not guest workers ed perkins, chair ieee-usa career...

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The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee [email protected] Vin O’Neill, IEEE-USA Senior Legislative Representative [email protected] 2007 Annual Meeting “Capitalizing on Global Opportunities” 31 August – 3 September Scottsdale, AZ

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Page 1: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

The Positive Side of ImmigrationGreen Cards, Not Guest Workers

Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee

[email protected]

Vin O’Neill, IEEE-USASenior Legislative Representative

[email protected]

2007 Annual Meeting “Capitalizing on Global Opportunities”31 August – 3 September

Scottsdale, AZ

Page 2: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Presentation Outline

Importance of Highly Skilled Immigrants Foreign Participation in STEM Workforce Visa Programs for STEM Professionals IEEE-USA Position Pending Federal Legislation Conflicting Interests

Page 3: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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The Positive Side of Immigration

Page 4: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Foreign Born Scientists and Engineers

Alex Graham Bell Albert Einstein Enrico Fermi Edward Teller Nikola Tesla Werner Von Braun

Anousheh Ansari Sergey Brin Andy Grove Vinod Khosla Linus Torvalds Jerry Yang

Page 5: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Recent Contributions by Immigrants 25% of new tech companies founded between 1995 and 2005 26%of international patent applications in 2006

50% of international patents filed in 2006 by multi-nationals, including:

Qualcomm (72 percent) Merck & Co. (65 percent) General Electric (64 percent) Siemens (63 percent) Cisco (60 percent)

41% of patents filed by the U.S. government

Source: Kaufmann Foundation

Page 6: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Foreign Born STEM* Professionals Participation in US Workforce

STEM Professionals Numbers % Native % Foreign

Math & Computer Scientists 3,010,546 82% 18%

Engineers 1,704,862 84% 16%

Physical Scientists 361,486 75% 25%

Life Scientists 217,308 77% 23%

Social Scientists 341,983 90% 10%

All STEM Professionals 7,030,867 83% 17%

All professional specialties 21,368,000 90% 10%

All employed workers 136,891,000 88% 12%

Source: US Census, 2000

* STEM = Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics

Page 7: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Foreign Born STEM Professionals Major Countries of Origin

STEM Professionals India China FSS Phil Mex OtherMath & Computer Scientists 24% 17% 5% 7% 4% 43%Engineers 12% 16% 7% 4% 3% 58%Physical Scientists 12% 25% 3% 6% 1% 53%Life Scientists 11% 29% 5% 2% 2% 51%Social Scientists 7% 8% 3% 4% 3% 75%

All STEM Professionals 17% 16% 5% 5% 4% 53%

Source: US Census, 2000

FSS = Former Soviet States

Page 8: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Immigration to the United States – Principal Paths to Entry

Permanent (Immigrant) Admissions ~ 1 million per year Family-sponsored, employer-based, refugees, diversity

Temporary (Non-Immigrant) Admissions ~ 30 million per year Business, employment, study, travel

Illegal (Undocumented) Admissions ~ .5 – 1 million per year 40% Visa overstays, 60% Illegal entrants

Source: Numbers USA Education and Research Foundation

Page 9: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Administration and Enforcement Responsibilities are Fragmented

Department of Labor Office of Foreign Labor Certification Wage & Hour Division

Department of Homeland Security US Customs and Immigration Service Immigration and Customs Enforcement

Department of State US Embassies Bureau of Consular Affairs

Department of Justice Executive Office for Immigration Review Special Counsel for Unfair Immigration-related Employment

Practices

Page 10: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin
Page 11: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Permanent (Immigrant) Admissions By Visa Categories

Immigrant Visa Categories Limits Admits Percent

Immediate relatives of citizens 418,522 44%Family-based preferences 480,000 214,355 22%Employment-based preferences 140,000 155,330 16%Refugees and asylees 119,592 13%Diversity immigrants 55,000 50,084 5%

Totals 675,000+ 957,883 100%

Source: US DHS, Office of Immigration Statistics, 2004

Page 12: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Employment-Based (EB) Admissions by Visa Preferences

Admissions Preferences Limits Admits* Percent

Priority workers (extraordinary) 40,000 31,291 20%Advanced degree professionals 40,000 32,534 21%Bachelors degree professionals 40,000 85,969 55%Special immigrants 10,000 5,407 3%Employment creating investors 10,000 129 --

Totals 140,000 155,330 100%

* Principals 72,550 47% Dependents 82,780 53%

Source: US DHS, Office of Immigration Statistics (2004)

Page 13: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Employment-Based (EB) Admissions By Country of Origin

Leading Countries of Origin AdmissionsPercent

Top Five 39,743 55%India 18,539 26%China 7,435 10%Philippines 7,398 10%Korea 3,269 5%Mexico 3,102 4%

All others 32,807 45%Totals 72,550 100%

Source: DHS, Office of Immigration Statistics (2004)

Page 14: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Immigrant Admissions - Issues and Concerns (Pros and Cons)

Pros: Provides a clear path to citizenship – unlimited mobility

and opportunity Immigrants and citizens compete on a level economic

playing field Green card holders (LPRs) have the same basic rights

as citizens (except the right to vote) Cons

Numbers are restricted – inflexible admissions ceilings and per country limits

Administrative complexity, backlogs and delays - uncertain results (EB backlog 1,181,505 in 2006)

Increasing dependence on temporary (non-immigrant) admissions

Page 15: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Temporary (Non-Immigrant) Admissions

Visa Categories Admits Percent

Short Term Temporary Visitors 27,395,921 88% (for Business and Travel)

Students and Exchange Visitors 935,196 3%Temporary Workers 831,715 3%Treaty Traders and Investors 182,934 1%Other temporary admissions 1,435,564 5%

Total temporary admissions 30,781,330 100%

Source: DHS, Office of Immigration Statistics (2004)

Page 16: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Temporary Work Visa Programs Admissions

Work Visa Programs Admits Percent

Specialty Occupations (H-1B)* 386,821 47%Intra-company transfers (L-1) 314,484 38%

Extra-ordinary ability (O-1) 27,127 3%

NAFTA professionals (TN) 66,219 8%Other temporary workers 37,064 4%

All temporary workers 831,715 100%

Source: DHS, Office of Immigration Statistics (2004)

Page 17: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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H1-B Fact Sheet

Term 3-years, renewable for 3 more years (for a total of 6 years)

Visas issued to employers, not workers

Visa Cap 65,000 per year (1992-1998) 115,000 per year (1999 -2000) 195,000 per year (2001-2003) 65,000 per year (since 2003)*

Exempt H-1B workers employed by higher educational institutions,

non- profit research organizations and government laboratories are not subject to the cap

Note* - 20,000 H-1B visas per year are reserved for use by foreign professionals with graduate degrees from US schools

Page 18: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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H-1B Temporary Work Visa Petition Approvals

Petition categories ApprovalsPercent

New Employment 130,497 45%Subject to cap (65,000) 71,740 25%Exempt from cap 58,737 20%

Continuing Employment 156,921 55% (Renewals)

Total H-1B petitions approved 287,418 100%

Source: DHS, Office of Immigration Statistics (2004)

Page 19: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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H-1B Worker Education

Associate1%

Bachelors48%

Masters35%

PhD11%

Other Prof5%

B

Page 20: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Distribution of H-1B Skills Based on Employer OCS* Petitions, for Computer Related Fields

56%31%

8%

5%

Level 1

Level 2

Level 3

Level 4

5%

Skill levels are OES skills, as defined on H-1B applications.

Level 1 is entry level.

John Miano, Low Salaries for Low Skills. (Washington, D.C.: Center for Immigration Studies, 2007)*OCS – Occupational Classification System, U.S. Department of Labor

(Entry Level)

(Expert Level)

Page 21: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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H1B Top Countries of Origin (2004)

46%

9%4%

4%

3%

34%

India

China

Canada

Philippines

Korea

All Other

Page 22: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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New H-1B Workers by Occupation: 2004

44%

11%

11%

10%

24%

Computer

Engineering

Administration

Education

All other

Page 23: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Numbers of New H-1B Visas1992 - 2005

0

50,000

100,000

150,000

200,000

250,000

USCIS Office of Immigration Statistics

Page 24: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Unemployment Trends for Electrical Engineers and Computer Scientists

0.0%

1.0%

2.0%

3.0%

4.0%

5.0%

6.0%

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006

Year

Per

cen

t

Managers Computer Engineering Professional All Workers

Page 25: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Median Compensation for New H-1B Workers, by Occupation

(not adjusted for inflation)

$30,000

$35,000

$40,000

$45,000

$50,000

$55,000

$60,000

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005

Computers

Engineering

Education

Medical

Managerial

LifeScience

Source: USCIS, Office of Immigration Statistics

Page 26: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Distribution of H-1B Wage ClaimsFor Computer-Related Professions

14%

27%

9% 10%

0%

10%

15%

25% 25%

15%

10%

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

40%

45%

50%

0 - 9% 10% - 24% 25% - 49% 50% - 74% 75% - 89% 90% - 99%

H-1B U.S.

Source: Miano, John. “Low Salaries for Low Skills.” Washington, DC, Center for Immigration Studies. April 2007

Page 27: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Major Employers of H-1B Workers: 2000 and 2006

Rank Top 10 Users - 2000 Top 10 Users - 2006

1 Motorola Infosys 2 Oracle Wipro 3 Cisco Cognizant 4 Mastech Patni 5 Intel MPHASIS 6 Microsoft HCL America 7 Rapidigm Deloitte & Touche 8 Syntel Tata 9 Wipro Accenture10 Tata Satyam

Source: DOL, Office of Foreign Labor Certification

Page 28: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Employer Sponsorship: H-1B Visas and Green Cards in 2006

Company H-1B GC Yield: GC / H-1B1

INFOSYS Technologies Ltd. 22,590 99 0.44%

WIPRO Ltd 19,450 69 0.35%

Cognizant Technology Solutions 11,330 40 0.35%

Patni Computer Systems, Inc. 9,922 29 0.29%

MPHASIS Co. 9,908 39 0.39%

HCL America, Inc 9,128 14 0.15%

Deloitte & Touche LLP 8,367 323 3.86%

TATA Consultancy Services Ltd. 7,528 1 0.01%

Accenture LLP 7,253 21 0.29%

Satyam Computer Services Ltd. 7,235 55 0.76%

Microsoft Corp. 4,471 1,181 26.41%

IBM Corp. 3,649 83 2.27%

Page 29: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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H-1B Visas - Key Issues and Concerns (Pros and Cons)

Advantages (for employers)

Access to a global pool of skilled professionals Serves as a transitional visa (path to citizenship) Facilitates onshore and offshore outsourcing

Disadvantages (for US and foreign professionals)

Nominal safeguards – recruitment, wages, displacement Limited oversight and enforcement Facilitates onshore and offshore outsourcing

Page 30: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Temporary Student Visa Programs(FY 2004-05)

Educational Visas* Visas Issued Percent

Academic Students (F-1) 255,993 45%Exchange Visitors (J-1) 303,822 54%Vocational Students (M-1) 5,975 1%

Totals 565,790 100% Note*: 8% of all Temporary Visas issued

Source: DOS, Bureau of Consular Affairs

Page 31: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Foreign Student Degree Levels

Associate Degree

12%

Bachelors Degree

31%

Graduate Degree

46%

Other11%

Page 32: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Student Demographics

Fields of Study

Business 20% Engineering 18% Computer Sci 10% Health Care 5% Education 3% Other 54%

Regions of Origin

Europe41%

Asia 40% South America 8% North America

5% Other 6%

Page 33: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Student Visas - Key Issues and Concerns (Pros and Cons)

Pros Substantial contributions to STEM education,

teaching and research, especially at the graduate and post-doctoral levels

Cons Admissions ceilings, per country limits and

return home requirements often deter foreign students from adjusting to immigrant status

Page 34: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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IEEE-USA Policy Recommendations

Ensuring a Strong High Tech Workforce Through Educational and Employment-Based Immigration Reforms

Increase the availability of employment-based (EB) visas and streamline the immigrant admissions (Green Card) process

Allow foreign students with advanced degrees in STEM fields from US schools to adjust directly from student visas to Green Cards

Reform the H-1B temporary work visa program – Require all employers to try to recruit US workers; to use the program to supplement, not replace, American workers; and pay H-1B workers, market-based wages.

Expedite visa processing for short term visitors

Adopted by IEEE-USA Board of Directors on 15 June 2007.

Page 35: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Major Legislative Proposals and Outlook: 110th Congress (2007-2008)

Comprehensive Immigration Reform Bills Include border security, interior enforcement, workplace

verification, new temporary work visa programs, legal admissions reforms and earned legalization provisions

HR 1645 (STRIVE Act) – Gutierrez/Flake S 1348 (Bipartisan Compromise) – Kennedy/Cornyn

High Skills Admissions Expansion Bills Include EB, H-1B and F visa provisions S 1083 (SKIL Act) - Cornyn HR 1930(SKIL Act) - Shadegg

Temporary H-1B and L-1 Visa Reform Bills S 1035 - Durbin/Grassley HR 2538 (Defend the American Dream Act) - Pascrell

Page 36: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Conflicting Interests and Perspectives

Employers Workers Others

Business and Professional AdvocacyIndustry Societies Groups

Educators Immigrants Individuals

Immigration Organized Think Lawyers Labor Tanks

Page 37: The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers Ed Perkins, Chair IEEE-USA Career and Workforce Policy Committee e.perkins@ieee.org Vin

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Sources of Information

Congressional Budget Office www.cbo.gov

Congressional Research Servicewww.loc.gov/crsinfo

Government Accountability Office www.gao.gov

Compete America www.competeamerica.org

Immigration Voice www.immigrationvoice.org

Economic Policy Institute www.epinet.org

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The Positive Side of Immigration Green Cards, Not Guest Workers