Did Gates Fib About H1-B Salaries?
netbuzz writes "While in Washington last year lobbying for higher H1-B visa limits, Bill Gates told David Broder of the Washington Post that Microsoft starts such workers at about $100,000. An analysis by one offshoring critic suggests that's not true. If his analysis is correct, it would undermine part of the case for lifting H1-B ceilings.
Are you telling me that Bill Gates lied to the population about their situation? And we gobbled it up?
... politician?
Bill Gates: computer scientist, marketer, business man, philanthropist
Who would have thought the term Renaissance Man could have such negative connotations?
You have no idea of the amount of regulation in India. It is much easier for India to move here than vice-versa.
What's not said in the article is that market rates change. Typically market rates go up (and I'd argue that they are up quite a bit right now). The greencard application process takes some time, and rates likely change in that time. If the greencard takes 2 years to apply for, and it's in process, then those H1-Bs don't want to change jobs and restart the application process. These aren't typical highly-mobile employees: they don't want to change jobs because the application process starts all over again. So, salaries of H1-B employees are likely to be considerably lower than current market rates.
From another perspective, Gates is saying that current market rates are ~100k. This is about right for mid-level software engineers with 2-4 years of experience, in that area.
It's not the same as looking at H1-B applications and trying to figure current rates, as they will reflect market conditions from 1-4 years ago (depending on when the H1-B process started for that individual).
Also, TFA cites green card applications, not green card grants.
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So, as hard as it might be for some of you to stomach, Gates is telling the truth. These are not Janitors Microsoft is hiring, but highly trained, highly sought after individuals, regardless of country of origin.
Deal with it.
The contest for ages has been to rescue liberty from the grasp of executive power. -- Daniel Webster
Valid point, but not accurate in my case. I did look very hard for jobs. Even enlisted the help of a job-finding service. I was offered one job immediately after graduating and turned it down because it was barely enough to live on, given the location. After that, nothing. I was willing to take just about anything within 6 months of that point, and went a year without getting a thing. It wasn't a case of me being picky or demanding. Not at all.
And I did finish law school, and work as a law clerk, which is pretty much the definition of taking a modest first job.
Well, to me the interesting thing about Bill Gates is how pathetic his goals seem to be; or how limited the execution is compared to his apparent resources and abilities.
If I had Bill's money, I'd be funding a mission to Mars, building supercolliders, or something like that that would actually go down in history. Bill, on the other hand... he built himself a big house, lent money to people, and then gave the interest they paid back to charity; plus he made a few tiny (1% of net worth scale) donations himself.
Meanwhile Paul Allen is financing Burt Rutan's spaceflights; and Ted Turner has set up over a dozen "ranch" nature preserves with an area larger than the two smallest states put together, and created the Goodwill Games. Bill's sending checks to AIDS researchers seems very pedestrian and uninspired by comparison.
GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
And I'd even believe that line (Heck, did believe it) until I started meeting MBE students with 5, 10, or even 20 years out of college in the industry who had been pegionholed as a Cobol programmer, and then gotten dumped for an H-1b instead of the company actually providing traing in newer technologies. I've known far too many American Software Engineers who ended up homeless during the last recession to believe this line of garbage. Near as I can tell, grad schools have become racist against White Americans, and HR departments doubly so, due to this myth.
SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
Where's "over there"? Western Europe? East Africa? An island in the Pacific?
I can't say I've ever had problems working with foreign-born colleagues. Or at least no worse than somebody born down the road. In fact I'd rather deal with somebody more worldly. Maybe your particular social background means that you haven't been able to adapt sufficiently to communicate well enough to successfully brainstorm with "them". Somebody from even as close culturally as Canada or the UK is going to take some time to learn Americanisms and the correct way to understand customers.