Slashdot Mirror


Evidence That H-1B Holders Don't Replace US Workers

Okian Warrior writes: In response to Donald Trump's allegations that H1B visas drive Americans out of jobs, The Huffington Post points to this study which refutes that claim. From the study: "But the data show that over the last decade, as businesses have requested more H-1Bs, they also expanded jobs for Americans." This seems to fly in the face of reason, consensus opinion, and numerous anecdotal reports. Is this report accurate? Have we been concerned over nothing these past few years? Remember, this is about aggregates, rather than whether some specific job has been replaced.

34 of 417 comments (clear)

  1. BULL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    I have a bunch of H-1B workers (All Indian) at my place of employment, so yeah, they DO replace American workers.

    1. Re:BULL by rudy_wayne · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, of course. Every foreign worker hired is a job that doesn't go to an American worker.

      Claiming that hiring foreign workers doesn't take jobs away from American workers is bizzaro logic at its best. Its the same bizzaro logic that said shutting down factories and sending millions of jobs to Mexico and China creates job for American workers.

      More importantly, the claim that these are "highly skilled workers" is a lie that insults our intelligence.

      Why is it that all of these "highly skilled workers" come from the same place - a country where a huge percentage of the population is illiterate and lives in poverty far beyond anything that exists in the U.S. A country where 350 million people, more than the entire population of the U.S., shit in public because they don't have access to a toilet. How is it possible that such a country is producing such huge numbers of "highly skilled workers"?

      That's right, it isn't possible. The only "skill" they possess is a willingness to work for low wages. And since the H1-B program is nothing more than legalized indentured servitude, companies can do anything they want without feat of being reported by the workers.

    2. Re:BULL by PortHaven · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But neither Scenario A or B is the common one.

      Scenario C - company doesn't hire the American worker that suits the role, and chooses to import a worker at 60% the salary cost. Company C rejects all American workers they can based on any criteria they can find, while accepting falsified resumes by H1B importer companies. Company C, who would of had to spend $1 million on American workers saves $400,000 on H1B workers. Rather than increase salary, the $400,000 is divided in two, $200,000 goes to investors, and $200,000 goes to executive bonuses.

      American worker finally concedes, lowers salary from $100K to $75K. Gets hired. Company C then hires H1B workers at $50K instead of $60K. Result, our own government IT jobs are filled with 30 man teams in which 3 are Americans and the rest H1B.

      That's far more the accurate scenario.

  2. Bull - You are missing something by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What the H1B provides is a means for an employee to *NOT* participate in relocation. By offering H1B positions, companies do not actively recruit people from other areas, assist in relocation, the alternative is to open more branch offices in other locations near the groups of people. Instead, they offer the H1B because (1) the cost of that worker is less, and (2) they do not need to provide relocation. Lastly, most H1B workers want a green card. The problem is once the worker starts the green card process they are sort of an indentured servant to the sponsoring company. They cannot quit, they cannot threaten to leave otherwise they loose the green card. This process lasts from 3 to 6 years. If the H1B worker had job mobility as a normal american does, the H1B worker would recognize the low pay, demand higher pay, or move on to another job in the USA leaving the low paying company with a hole. This job mobility (or non-mobility) by the H1B worker solves or causes the problem. I know this, I have been involved with these types of decisions, or watched these types of decisions occur right before me over the last 30+ years writing software.

  3. doesn't allow for expansion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Also, remember that part of the fight is about _expanding_ the pool of H1-Bs. From the pov of the employers, if current levels of H1Bs mean they aren't getting cheaper labor, then clearly they don't have enough H1-Bs. The study doesn't project what would happen if the number were increased substantially.

  4. Misdirection by Fire_Wraith · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is BS. The author of TFA is using the third type of lie, statistics, to suggest that H-1Bs aren't having a negative affect, by setting up a strawman argument. Sure, H-1Bs may not increase unemployment, IN AGGREGATE. But that's as easy as saying, "Well, Initech replaced 50 American coders with H-1Bs, but there's a new McDonalds open down the road that hired 60 people at minimum wage, so unemployment is down!"

    There was no mention of salaries, benefits, much less anything specific to particular fields, not even "IT." At most he made an argument that "STEM grads are less likely to be unemployed" but that means nothing, because that can still be true even if they're not being given the opportunities they should.

    1. Re:Misdirection by meta-monkey · · Score: 4, Interesting

      There was no mention of salaries, benefits, much less anything specific to particular fields, not even "IT."

      You've got the correct conclusion, but incorrect facts. Here's the full study. They do in fact separate out computer, engineering, and mathematics jobs, and they do compare wages, and do correctly conclude that wages are up. But,

      1) How high would wages be without H1-B competition? Sure, "real annual wages (2015$) in engineering, architectural, computer, and mathematical occupations" is up by a whopping $3000 from 2001 to 2015...during a time when tech companies are stashing billions.

      2) They're doing the same stupid thing everyone does with "the unemployment rate." Pretend I'm an engineer who gets replaced by a an H1-B. While I'm looking for an engineering job, I'm an "unemployed engineer" and show up in the unemployment rate for engineers statistics. If I take a job flipping burgs at McD's in order to not starve to death, I'm no longer an unemployed engineer. I'm an employed fast-food worker, and do not show up on the unemployment statistics. So in this way, yes, employment of H1-Bs can rise, while the unemployment rate for engineers does not budge.

      Somebody read How to Lie With Statistics and used it for evil instead of good.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
  5. Supply and Demand by RoccamOccam · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is just a rewording of the old saw that illegal immigrants are doing the jobs that Americans won't do -- at salaries that are too low. If the flow of H1-Bs dried up, then wages would rise as the American tech workers would become more valuable. As wages rose, then becoming a tech worker would be viewed more favorably.

    With the same evidence, Huff Po could have argued that H1-Bs are depressing wages for American tech workers.

  6. Re:Nope... Wrong interpretation. by JMJimmy · · Score: 5, Informative

    This just means there's more demand for skilled workers than h1b's and native talent pool combined.

    It means there's more demand for CHEAPER skilled workers than the native talent pool has.

    I've heard stories from a technical director at a major American firm where they'd reject PHDs simply because they were worried they'd leave for higher paying jobs elsewhere. Their opinion was "why employ someone who wants more in terms of benefits, vacation, pay, etc when we can bring in someone who is completely under our control, easily replaceable/dismissable as needed, and cheaper". Control is the real crux of it - these workers are completely at the whim of the company because once the company is done with them they can't seek another job they must return home. That lets them abuse the crap out of them and if they complain they get sent home and someone else is brought in to take their place.

  7. Re:Complete Bullshit - funded by Koch-funded CATO by iconeternal · · Score: 5, Informative

    Yeah, but HuffPo is just reporting on the study. They should know better than to take the Cato institute seriously, but apparently they don't.

  8. Re:Complete Bullshit - funded by Koch-funded CATO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Any other day and HuffPo would be telling us about the horrors of H1B abuse by large corporations. However, if it means furthering the narrative that Trump is bad, then suddenly H1Bs are good.

  9. Cost of labor is always a problem for companies by sjbe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It means there's more demand for CHEAPER skilled workers than the native talent pool has.

    There is ALWAYS demand for less expensive labor. Sometimes it isn't available. Sometimes companies engage in measures to reduce labor costs. Importing cheaper labor is fundamentally no different than offshoring the work. The basic goal is the same - to reduce labor costs. I run a manufacturing company and we do all our work domestically and pay as much as we can but our competition does a lot of their work in Central America or China so we really cannot compete on jobs with a high labor content unless there are special requirements like engineering help or just in time delivery. We simply cannot pay much more than we do and remain competitive.

    Some companies are obviously engaged in some shady tactics to keep labor costs down. The tactics may be reprehensible but the fact that they are trying to contain labor costs should surprise no one. In a competitive market companies HAVE to try to do that. It's particularly galling though when the company has huge profit margins like Microsoft or Facebook does. A low margin manufacturing company might go out of business if they don't keep a tight lid on labor costs. A hugely profitable tech company has no such excuse.

    I've heard stories from a technical director at a major American firm where they'd reject PHDs simply because they were worried they'd leave for higher paying jobs elsewhere.

    It's not just PHDs. I have a pair of masters degrees and I've been told point-blank during interviews that they were afraid I would get bored and leave or seek higher paying work. It's incredibly short sighted but it happens pretty routinely.

    1. Re:Cost of labor is always a problem for companies by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I don't even HAVE a degree and I've run into this sort of thing.

      Yes, this. Employers created this situation by being more willing to hire people who already have jobs, and now they're worried about the situation where some other employer is more willing to hire someone who has a job.

      Before I had even my useless two year degree (it filled time, I learned some stuff) I had already experienced this, where I was too qualified for positions at which I'd have been perfectly happy.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:Cost of labor is always a problem for companies by shaitand · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Manufacturing is a bit different especially unskilled. Workers can simply shift to other professions if demand for US talent slows. Our general economic strategy as a nation is to shift those less skilled jobs out and replace them with higher level and more skilled positions.

      Tech is the fastest growing and one of the highest paid job sectors and requires substantial investment in terms of time and education on the part of the workers. These are the jobs those losing jobs in manufacturing are supposed to be able to learn skills for and take on as a career. There is nowhere to go from here.

      In the company I'm working for now I'm considered to be at the highest rank an engineer can obtain. This is a massive telecom/service provider/cloud company who will not be named. Every tier below has either been moved offshore or replaced by H1-B workers. With regard to my peers all full time US hiring is frozen and contracts are filled with a preference for H1-B's only resorting to US talent when no H1-B is available (this is the opposite of how it's supposed to work). In tech your salaries generally don't go up so upward mobility comes from shifting positions. Someone who stays in positions for a year or two is equivalent to 20 year+ in positions in the financial industry. When anyone shifts out they are replaced with an H1-B if at all possible regardless of why they left. In the last 1.5yrs my team went from being entirely US staff (mostly full time but a few contractors who were routinely converted once they'd proven themselves) to 50% H1-B Contractors.

      We are talking about thousands of jobs. But hey, on the up side the difficulties with accent are disappearing because client organizations are filling with the same H1-B workers and they all have the same accent.

  10. You mean... by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 5, Informative

    You mean...Disney didn't replace their US tech employees with H-1B Visa holders? So their US employees did not train their H-1B Visa replacements?

    You mean...Microsoft didn't lay off 18,000 people and then lobby Congress to increase the number of H-1B Visas?

    You mean...there isn't economic research that refutes that article's premise: "As longtime researchers of the STEM workforce and immigration who have separately done in-depth analyses on these issues, and having no self-interest in the outcomes of the legislative debate, we feel compelled to report that none of us has been able to find any credible evidence to support the IT industry’s assertions of labor shortages." http://www.epi.org/publication...

    Sounds like a page out of the Philip Morris playbook: "cigarettes don't cause cancer" - "H-1B Visa holders don't displace American workers"

  11. Re:Complete Bullshit - funded by Koch-funded CATO by I'm+New+Around+Here · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Any other day and HuffPo would be telling us about the horrors of H1B abuse by large corporations. However, if it means furthering the narrative that Trump is bad, then suddenly H1Bs are good.

    Someone finally states the correct spin of the article. I doesn't matter who funded the study or why, it's needed to attack Trump.

    --
    If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.
  12. Re:Nope... Wrong interpretation. by thaylin · · Score: 5, Informative

    you realize there is only about 167m Americans of working age right? You mean that the unemployment rate is at 60%? Out of 318m people, 47.4% are not of the working age. http://quickfacts.census.gov/q...

    --
    When you cant win, ad hominem.
  13. Re:Nope... Wrong interpretation. by Penguinisto · · Score: 5, Interesting

    That is incorrect. If the management thinks that they probably have not researched it properly. Once here on their H1-b can moe to any company willing to take over the H1-B.

    Actually, you are not fully correct either. Well, ostensibly you are correct, but here's what really happens:

    * The vast majority of H1-B workers are tied to Infosys, Tata, Wipro or some other India-HQ'd company as their sponsor, which means if the worker complains, said worker is recalled to India and quickly replaced. Huge corps like Nike *love* this kind of arrangement (this is a real-world example - Nike is a huge customer of Infosys). This in turn gives the client corporation (e.g. Nike) full control over their charges while their charges are in the US - one complaint from the corporation, and Infosys/Tata/Wipro does all the dirty work for them and provides a replacement within literal days.

    * the second part of your sentence, "...any company willing to take over the H1-B" is the condition that undoes the rule. Kindly tell me how many companies are willingly going to take on someone under those conditions? Doing so w/o a company like Infosys/Tata/etc means expense and paperwork...

    QED, 'mano :)

    --
    Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
  14. Re:Nope... Wrong interpretation. by tmosley · · Score: 4, Interesting

    No, it means the unemployment rate, as it was calculated during the Great Depression, is higher than it was for all but one year of Great Depression. http://www.shadowstats.com/alt...

  15. Re:Complete Bullshit - funded by Koch-funded CATO by Fire_Wraith · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Yes - the focus of the article isn't defending H-1B abuse specifically, it's on attacking Trump more broadly. The H-1B statistics are just one of several arguments.

    And while I don't agree with Trump on some of the other stuff, his comments about H-1B abuse were spot on, and the op-ed piece was just BS.

    Also, wasn't HuffPo still refusing to cover Trump's campaign as political news, and insisting on filing it under entertainment? I guess consistency from them would be too much to ask for.

  16. Re:Complete Bullshit - funded by Koch-funded CATO by wiggles · · Score: 4, Funny

    They are not far left. They are anti-Republican. Hence, if Republicans start preaching about global warming and nuclear disarmament, guaranteed HuffPo will want to invade Russia and fire up the coal plants.

    It's not about what they want done, it's who they want to lose.

  17. Re:Complete Bullshit - funded by Koch-funded CATO by dave420 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You realize you just told the world you don't know what "far left" means, right?

  18. Re:Complete Bullshit - funded by Koch-funded CATO by Vermonter · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I suppose when you yourself are far left but tell yourself you are moderate, then everything seems far right by comparison.

  19. Re:Nope... Wrong interpretation. by donaggie03 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    GP meant Depression in both places it is used. GP did also leave out a clause that would clarify the meaning and tie it to the Great Recession though. Here's what (s)he is trying to say: "..the unemployment rate *now*, if calculated the same way it was calculated during the Great Depression (as opposed to how they've changed the calculation to make the numbers look better) is higher than it was for all but one year of the Great Depression." In other words, GP is claiming that the current REAL unemployment rate is a lot higher than what you hear in the news.

    --
    Three days from now?? Thats tomorrow!! ~Peter Griffin
  20. Re:Nope... Wrong interpretation. by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Yes, this. ( sorry I was going to mod here, but I have to post, even though I signed into hypothesis annotations https://hypothes.is/stream and marked this article up all over ).

    There is an *association* between H 1B and hiring because H 1B is granted in areas of relatively high demand for labor, and so total hiring is bound to increase in those areas. This doesn't mean H 1B is causing the hiring, it's merely that those who are hiring are hiring H 1B.

    Also, companies put their budgets where it will solve their problems. They hire contractors to get more labor quick. This article says that H 1Bs are paid more than Americans so they can't be replacing them. THEY ARE. By keeping incentives low to be contractors, they are replacing would-be American contractors.

    Also they prevent companies from being creative to fill positions by doing things like partnering with local educational institutions, running training programs, and helping financially with prospective employee's education.

     

    --
    ...
  21. Re:Nope... Wrong interpretation. by Penguinisto · · Score: 4, Insightful

    From my understanding once the employee leaves infosys for another company then infosys does not have control anymore.

    That's the thing - the H1-B would have to quit first (*if* another company is willing to take him on), which would be an escape. However, as noted, it is an added expense. Also, if the client company complains, the H1-B usually gets recalled to India for 'reassignment'. I cannot claim to know what happens after that, but unless that H1-B has a rare skill, I bet it isn't pretty. Note that this is technically illegal, but yet it's still there, as evidenced by the relationship between, say, Infosys and their client companies.

    You claim it is a small part of the person's salary, but it still requires work from the new company's HR department, so unless they already have someone there set up to handle H1-B visas, they'll have to spend the time to do it (which in turn costs money) - and no, unlike your assertion, it is not a simple matter.

    --
    Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
  22. Re:Nope... Wrong interpretation. by Zet · · Score: 4, Insightful

    > I've heard stories from a technical director at a major American firm where they'd reject PHDs
    > simply because they were worried they'd leave for higher paying jobs elsewhere.

    Employers who think this way will ultimately hire the employees they deserve.

    Pay is not the only thing that attracts a person to a job (or keeps them there). A person leaves
    for a *better* job, which may or may not mean it offers higher pay.

  23. Re:Nope... Wrong interpretation. by blue9steel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    But no, the majority of H1-B workers are not "slaves".

    Of course not, nowadays we call them "salaried employees" instead. Have you seen the 10th Edition of the Newspeak Dictionary?

  24. Re:Nope... Wrong interpretation. by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 4, Informative

    How many days do they have once fired from a company to get someone to take it over?

    30. In theory. In practice, nobody is really monitoring that closely. We have 10 million illegal Mexicans, so a handful of Indians bending the rules isn't a big concern.

  25. Re:Nope... Wrong interpretation. by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Kindly tell me how many companies are willingly going to take on someone under those conditions?

    Here in Silicon Valley, "stealing" H1Bs from other companies is a common occurrence. Hiring them away from a competitor is way easier than doing all the paperwork to bring them direct from India. My company has done some stealing, and we have also been stolen from.

  26. More bull! by s.petry · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Besides the rural population you already mentioned, there are another 350M middle class there, and yet another 350M there that are quite well off, have access to excellent schools thus becoming as "highly skilled" as a westerner.

    Why people want to claim such easy to disprove bullshit is quite befuddling. No country has a good balance between rich, poor, and middle class. The 1/3rd of the population you claim exists and is "quite well off" simply does not! India is very similar to the US where the top .01% own most of the country and the top 10% own 90% of the wealth just like the US. There are more people in extreme poverty in India which makes them worse than the US.

    Getting a degree does not make a good and productive worker in a foreign country. If it did, every company would have more Chinese workers than Indian workers because that is who the numbers have favored for decades. There is quite a bit to that discussion, more than I care to get into in this thread. Anyone that has dealt with development and support out of a foreign country knows exactly what I'm talking about.

    Your personal anecdote with hiring does not change the fact that H1B workers are easily pressured into working far more than anyone should. Recent criminal actions against several companies for human rights violations in the SF Bay area should make that abundantly clear, and we only know about the few that were abused to a point where they turned in their sponsors. Of course a H1B worker is "hard working"! That is the point of people calling it a legal indentured servitude. For every one company that uses the system correctly there are at least as many that don't.

    --

    -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

  27. Re:Nope... Wrong interpretation. by JMJimmy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    So since the interview process takes 22 days on average now that means the person has 8 days to get an interview to remain legal.

  28. Two logic errors by duckintheface · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I see two obvious errors in logic in this analysis.
    1. Rising total employment of Americans does not mean that other Americans were not replaced by H1B holders. If there were no H1Bs, employment of Americans would have been even higher. What sloppy logic!

    2. From the article: "If H-1Bs were primarily cheaper substitutes for American labor, the pace of H-1B requests...should rise when unemployment rises, as employers look to cut labor costs by laying off workers." In what universe does this logic make sense? If unemployment is higher, cheaper labor can be obtained by hiring more Americans since they are having a harder time finding a job. The actual results are completely consistent with H1Bs being a cheaper replacement for American workers.

    --
    "He took a duck in the face at 250 knots." -- William Gibson, Pattern Recognition
    1. Re:Two logic errors by Jumunquo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Well said.

      They concluded that for every 3 new jobs in the tech sector, since 1 went to H1B and 2 went to residents, then that H1B created 2 jobs. I kid you not. It's a short article; you can read it yourself. They totally ignore the real question, which is whether all 3 of those new jobs could have been filled by residents. Likewise all upwards trends in tech, incl. wage increases, are attributed to H1B with absolutely nothing backing that correlation - only pretty graphs showing the jobs and wages going up.