Indian firms were largest H-1B users in 2007
SOURCE: ComputerWorld
DATE: March 10th, 2008
ARTICLE
Indian offshore outsourcing firm Infosys Technologies Ltd. received 4,559 H-1B visas in the fiscal year 2007, the largest number received by any company, according to the latest figures of “initial beneficiaries” from the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service.But this new list from USCIS (1.50MB, PDF format) also shows that H-1B use is spread far and wide. The 2007 list includes more than 29,000 H-1B recipients, both private companies and institutions, such as universities, some of which are exempt from the 65,000 visa cap. Nearly 20,000 of the companies and institutions listed received only 1 H-1B visa in that fiscal year.
In fiscal 2007, India-based offshore outsourcing companies continued to dominate the top 10 H-1B recipients, with the exception of Microsoft Corp., Intel Corp. and Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp., which runs major offshore operations.
H-1B visas holders may stay in the U.S. for six years. The USCIS list does not include all H-1B visa holders that a company may have, but only the initial beneficiaries for 2007. Many of the largest users have been receiving H-1B visas for years.
In total, the top 20 recipients, mostly Indian-based offshore companies and large U.S. tech companies, received about 15,640 H-1B visas last year.
The list comes at the start of a big week for the H-1B visa issue. Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates will testify Wednesday before the U.S. House Committee on Science and Technology, and will speak Thursday to the Northern Virginia Technology Council. Gates has been an outspoken critic of the cap restrictions in the visa policy.
Gates is the point in the spear of the tech industry’s push for more H-1B visas, but Christopher Hansen, the president and CEO of the American Electronics Association, said today that the election year may make it difficult to get an increase in the visa cap. What the industry may be doing this year, he said, is “laying out the arguments for something that will happen 2009,” referring to an increase in that year.
Hansen was on a conference call today to lend his support to the National Foundation for American Policy, which argued in a new report pdf format that for every H-1B position requested, U.S. companies increase their employment by five workers.
Stuart Anderson, who heads the Arlington, Va.-based foundation, said he relied on publicly accessible Web-based help-wanted ads by companies and reported employment data to draw what he says is a statistical relationship between H-1B use and new jobs at these companies. He said the data didn’t show what kinds of jobs were created, and that new jobs could range from hourly to executive level.
Using that same Web data, Anderson said large U.S. tech companies average more than 470 job openings for skilled positions while defense contractors have more than 1,255 each.
The 2008 federal fiscal year began Oct. 1. A company-by-company breakdown is not available from USCIS for the current fiscal year. This data, when available, will show the impact of the random lottery on the division of the H-1B visas. The USCIS uses a lottery when it receives more than enough applications to meet the cap in the first few days. The lottery was not used in fiscal 2007.
Top H1-B Visa Recipients
| Company | 2007 | 2006 | Rank in 2006 |
|---|
Source: U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service
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