US slaps $100,000 H-1B visa shocker

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New York/Washington, Sep 20: US President Donald Trump signed a proclamation that will raise the application fee for H1-B visas to a staggering USD 100,000, a move that could significantly impact Indian employees working in the US on work visa.
Trump on Friday signed the proclamation that will raise the fee that companies pay to sponsor H1-B applicants to USD 100,000.
The Trump administration said that the move is aimed at ensuring that the people being brought into the country are “actually very highly skilled” and do not replace American workers.
H1-B fee ‘reckless’
US lawmakers and community leaders voiced concern over US President Donald Trump’s plan to impose a $100,000 fee on H-1B visa applications, calling the move “reckless” and “unfortunate” that will have a “huge negative” impact on the IT industry.
Trump’s USD 100,000 H-1B visa fee is a “reckless attempt to cut America off from high-skilled workers who have long strengthened our workforce, fuelled innovation, and helped build industries that employ millions of Americans,” Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi said.
Krishnamoorthi said many H-1B holders ultimately become citizens and launch businesses that create well-paying jobs in the US. “While other nations race to attract global talent, the United States should strengthen its workforce and modernise our immigration system-not erect barriers that weaken our economy and security,” he said.
Former advisor to president Joe Biden and Asian-American community leader on immigration policy, Ajay Bhutoria, warned of a potential crisis for the US technology sector’s competitive edge with Trump’s new plan to impose the “staggering” H1-B fee. “The H-1B programme, a lifeline for innovation that has attracted top talent from around the world, faces unprecedented barriers with this massive jump from the current USD 2000-USD 5000 total fee, which will crush small businesses and startups reliant on diverse talent,” Bhutoria said.
Bhutoria added that the move will drive away skilled professionals who power Silicon Valley and contribute billions to the US economy.
He said the move may backfire by pushing talent to competitors like Canada or Europe. (PTI)

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