We Educate Foreign Students, Then Deport Them

By admin | November 30, 2007

Submitted by CARPE DIEM

A mere 65,000 H-1B visas for foreign professionals are allocated in the U.S. each year. And this year, as in the previous four, the quota was exhausted almost as soon as the applications became available in April. This effectively means that more than half of all foreign nationals who earned advanced degrees in math and science in 2007 have been shut out of the U.S. job market.

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3 Responses to “We Educate Foreign Students, Then Deport Them”

  1. weaver Says:
    November 30th, 2007 at 4:12 pm

    A mere 65,000 visas? The Department of Travel states that 135,421 H-1B and and additional 72,613 L-1 (Intracompany) visa were issued. (Preliminary)

    In addition, the Employment Based visas were as follows:
    Employment based visas 2006:
    2006 EB First Preference = 37,504
    2006 EB Second Preference = 22,430
    2006 EB Third Preference = 58,357

    Only about 13,600 of the possible 120,200 EB visa were issued at foreign service ports.

    Lets see how significant the the Science and Engineering degrees were in 2006.

    Derived from the ASEE published data.

    The total number of Engineering PhDs awarded to foreign students in 2006 was 5,153, well within the annual 40,400 Employment-Based First Preference (E1) visa allotment.

    The total number of Engineering Masters degrees awarded to foreign students in 2006 was 15,528, well within the annual 40,400 Employment-Based Second Preference (E2) visa allotment.

    The total number of Engineering Bachelors degrees awarded to foreign students in 2006 was 5,341, well within the annual 40,400 Employment-Based Third Preference (E3) visa and recapture of unused (E2) visa allotment.

    Here the extrapolation for domestic Engineering Degrees

    Subtotal “Domestic” Engineering Degrees 1999-2006 = 863,562

    (Adjusted Masters and Bachelor’s to reflect multiple degrees)
    DOCTORAL DEGREES 1999-2006 = 23,257
    MASTERS DEGREES 1999-2006 = 132,041
    BACHELOR’S DEGREES 1999-2006 = 552,966

    From Senator Grassley’s Top 20 H-1B employers we find…

    2006 H-1B and L-1 visas in Top 20 list — Total visas = 48,159

    Business Process Outsourcing Specialists (12)
    TATA CONSULTANCY SERVICES LIMITED = 8293
    INFOSYS TECHNOLOGIES LIMITED = 5202
    WIPRO LIMITED = 4841
    SATYAM COMPUTER SERVICES LTD = 3830
    PATNI COMPUTER SYSTEMS INC = 1831
    HCL AMERICA INC = 1421
    LARSEN & TOUBRO INFOTECH LIMITED = 1090
    I-FLEX SOLUTIONS INC = 876
    MPHASIS CORPORATION = 809
    TECH MAHINDRA AMERICAS INC = 781
    COGNIZANT TECH SOLUTIONS U S CORP = 5746
    LANCESOFT INC = 645
    Total H-1B and L-1 visas reported = 35,365
    Percentage of “Top 20″ Total = 73.43%

    Accounting Services (2)
    ERNST & YOUNG LLP = 913
    DELOITTE & TOUCHE = 2067
    Total H-1B and L-1 visas reported = 2980
    Percentage of “Top 20″ Total = 6.19%

    Producers of Tangible Goods (6)
    MICROSOFT = 3285
    IBM CORPORATION = 2367
    INTEL CORP = 1222
    ORACLE USA INC = 1198
    CISCO SYSTEMS INC = 893
    MOTOROLA INC = 849
    Total H-1B and L-1 visas reported = 9814
    Percentage of “Top 20″ Total = 20.38%

    In effect, the article’s author is arguing for more H-1B’s and L-1 visas which have caused a 500,000 person backlog in the EB green card system.

    Here we have the Total Foreign Student Enrollment for 2006.

    The Institute of International Education (IIE) reports the following new admissions to the U.S. educational system for the 2006-2007 school year.

    Undergraduate = 63,749
    Postgraduate = 72,726
    Other = 20,703

    Total = 157,178

    There is no guarantee that these student will graduate, nor that all students are interested in immigrating to the U.S.

    Also, see the Urban Institute, Rand and other studies proving that Engineering graduates have exceeded Engineering Job growth by 3 to 1.

  2. weaver Says:
    November 30th, 2007 at 4:30 pm

    Oops, 121,200 Employment Based E1, E2 and E3 visas available per year.

    Sources and documentation for prior post on my blog.

    http://immigration-weaver.blogspot.com/

  3. Scomo Says:
    December 1st, 2007 at 1:44 am

    PhD as is well known means “piled high and deep” , come
    on, I’ve worked with 50 PhDs over the years and only one is worth his salt. A PhD doesn’t guarantee success, witness Bill Gates and countless others. Insight, intelligence and perserverence are the keys to success and always has been. Education, especially today, is a racket and a waste of money. Those who know the secret, get a good education on the cheap and then move on to succeed.

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