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AMERICA NEEDS IMMIGRATION REFORM, OR IT RISKS LOSING AN ENTIRE GENERATION OF
TECH WORKERS TO COUNTRIES LIKE CANADA, THE UK, AND JAPAN

Emilia David and Paayal Zaveri
Mar 23, 2023, 5:00 AM ET
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While the US still attracts talent, many tech workers are choosing to go to
countries with easier immigration policies like Canada, the UK, and Singapore.
iStock; Robyn Phelps/Insider

 * Mass layoffs across tech showed the vulnerability of immigrant employees on
   work visas.
 * While the US still attracts talent, workers increasingly go to places like
   the UK or Canada.
 * With other countries easing immigration for tech workers, the US may find
   itself lagging.

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Varun Negandhi always intended to one day join the ranks of the US' great
immigrant tech-startup founders. 

But seven years into his career as a mechanical engineer in Detroit's legendary
auto industry, he found out his work visa prevented him from starting up a
company of his own. And applications for permanent residency, by way of the
famed "green card," were in a queue lasting as long as a decade.

He started to look for a new country in which to settle his family that had
friendlier visa terms — and found one very close to home.

"Being in Detroit and being on the border of US and Canada, I saw friends moving
to Canada while working on an H-1B with their companies," he said. "Then it
started to click that I can go to Canada, work with my company, but also have
the freedom to start something on the side."



Negandhi's story epitomizes a trend that should trouble America and its storied
tech industry. Foreign-born workers are increasingly going to countries
including Canada, the United Kingdom, Singapore, and Australia, where they're
freer to find a job or start their own company without having to deal with
America's immigration system, which many consider nightmarish and outdated.

As those tech workers look for greener pastures, that means America isn't
getting the talent it desperately needs to keep up with China, India, and other
countries, whose own tech sectors are blossoming into formidable rivals to
Silicon Valley. 

Without change, and fast, experts say this could mean an entire lost generation
of tech talent for American tech.

"We have a shortage of highly skilled workers," Jason Finkelman, an immigration
lawyer who specializes in work visas, said. "Therefore, the H-1B visa program
and similar programs address that because you have so many US companies that are
struggling to find the talent they need to remain competitive in the global
marketplace." 



And America's loss is proving a boon for other countries, who are explicitly
going after the skilled tech workers who fall through the cracks of America's
immigration system.

"Foreign countries have figured out ways to more aggressively attack top-tier
tech talent," Hiba Anver, an immigration attorney with Erickson Immigration
Group, told Insider. "The US as a destination is not No. 1 by as big of a margin
as it has been in past years." 


THE US NEEDS TO MOVE FAST OR RISK BEING LEFT BEHIND

If the US wants to remain the top destination for tech talent, the government
needs to make changes to the system, or it risks falling behind, experts said.

The country's immigration system is notoriously hard to navigate and has been
backlogged for years. Tech companies have relied on student and work visas —
including the F-1, L-1, and the limited H-1B programs — to keep recruiting top
talent from around the world. H-1B visas, a favorite of the tech industry, are
capped at 85,000 each year. That figure hasn't changed since the 1990s, even as
Silicon Valley has matured into a global superpower.



So applications for that visa far exceed that number, hitting over 300,000 in
2021 and 2022. Pandemic-era backlogs have also persisted, making the wait even
longer. The wave of layoffs sweeping the tech sector has made that shortage an
urgent problem: If someone on an H-1B visa loses their job, they have 60 days to
find a new one or risk deportation.

Critics also say it's too hard for international students to find a path to
staying in the US after graduation, which deprives the country of the potential
for them to found the next great tech company.

"What we've allowed is to make it impossible for international students to do
something in the US," Eugene Malobrodsky, a partner at the early-stage
venture-capital firm One Way Ventures, said. "So they were kicked out of the
country, went back to their home, and started a company that became a unicorn.
We could've had those unicorns in the US. We keep putting roadblocks in front of
the best talent in the world."


AMERICA'S LOSS IS OTHER COUNTRIES' GAIN

Meanwhile, other countries are making it easier for tech workers like Negandhi
and students to immigrate. Canada allows highly skilled immigrants to get
permanent residency, where they have the freedom to change jobs without a time
limit. It also requires only a three-year permanent-residency period before you
can apply for citizenship, much faster than the decade it can take in the US.
The wait can be even longer for immigrants from India and China, given the
limits for each country.



Japan slashed wait times to get permanent residency for researchers and
engineers to one year, Singapore introduced a visa targeted at tech workers, and
the UK grants graduates from top universities (many in the US) visas regardless
of nationality.

That makes those countries more attractive for entrepreneurs and highly skilled
tech workers — and it incentivizes even American tech companies to emphasize
hiring for new roles in countries with more flexible immigration policies
because they can hire from around the world in those offices, Anver, one of the
immigration attorneys, said.


IMMIGRANTS WHO LEAVE AMERICA CAN FIND A HIGHER QUALITY OF LIFE ELSEWHERE

Despite the pandemic, and the backlogs in the system over the past few years,
applications for H-1B visas are just as high as ever, signaling that the US is
still the top choice for many.

At the same time, though, those who leave for countries like Canada aren't
necessarily eager to return.



That's the case for Aditya Joshi, who emigrated from India to the US on an L-1
visa. After two years on the job, his employer reassigned him back to India. He
quickly found out that he didn't have a lot of options if he wanted to stay in
the US: He couldn't switch employers under the terms of an L-1, and if his
company revoked its sponsorship of his visa, it would endanger his ability to
stay in the US.

Knowing that the US system could be complicated, he previously applied for
residency in Canada. He ultimately moved his family there in 2021, when he
landed a job with Meta that allowed him to work remotely. Canada's more flexible
approach allowed him to stay in the country without an expiration date, meaning
more peace of mind for him and his family.

In Canada, he said the cost of living was lower, the real estate was cheaper,
and policy around immigrant workers was less politically charged. He has
complicated feelings about moving back to the US. While Canada offers more
stability, he does feel like growing in his career will be harder from outside
the pull of Silicon Valley.

For now, though, he's happy to stay in Canada.



"We can afford a bigger house over here. Things are greener and cleaner over
here — those things are definitely much better in Canada," he said. "I don't
have to worry about what happens tomorrow." 


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