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VISA WARS AND THE GREAT BRAIN DRAIN: MAKE INDIA GREAT AGAIN

The Sunday Guardian

|

September 28, 2025

America's dramatic hike in the H1B visa fee is a watershed moment for global talent mobility, forcing India to confront both risks and opportunities. This is more than a cautionary tale; it is a chance for India to assert itself in the geopolitics of human capital.

- BRIJESH SINGH

VISA WARS AND THE GREAT BRAIN DRAIN: MAKE INDIA GREAT AGAIN

U.S. President Donald Trump.

It began with a signature. On a brisk September day in 2025, President Trump's administration enacted a sweeping new rule: any U.S. company hoping to employ a high-skilled worker on the H1B visa would have to pay a staggering $100,000 fee for every new application.

With one stroke, the world's most sought-after employment pass became an elite ticket beset with unprecedented costs. And as the new reality settles in, it's clear that this was not just an American policy changeit is a global turning point, sending ripples from San Francisco to Shenzhen, Bengaluru to Berlin, and igniting what many now describe as the age of "visa wars."

AMERICA'S POLICY SHOCK: REWIRING GLOBAL AMBITION

For decades, the United States held an unmatched allure for the world's best and brightest. For engineers in India, PhDs in China, and IT professionals in Eastern Europe, the H1B visa represented a launchpad to international careers, significant earnings, and a pathway to eventual citizenship. Multinationals-from Silicon Valley giants to Wall Street investment banks-relied on this channel to power innovation and maintain global competitiveness.

But the new six-figure H1B fee fundamentally rewires that equation. Employers who once pursued every smart graduate regardless of nationality now must ask: is this person $100,000-a-year valuable, or should the job stay home? According to U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, the move is justified: "If you're that valuable, you're worth it. If not, train Americans instead." Yet for global recruiters, the calculus is suddenly more complexand for many, the game has already moved elsewhere.

CHAOS AND CONFUSION: WHO PAYS, WHO STAYS?

FLERE HISTORIER FRA The Sunday Guardian

The Sunday Guardian

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time to read

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time to read

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