Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
The Visas Dividing MAGA World Help Power the U.S. Tech Industry
Mint Hyderabad
|January 02, 2025
Behind the uproar over the H-1B visa is a simple fact: America's tech industry is hooked on imported labor.
The program was at the center of a fight that broke out between President-elect Donald Trump's supporters over the holidays. Elon Musk and other tech executives defended H-1B visas as crucial to the success of U.S. businesses. Other stalwarts in the MAGA movement said tech companies should be forced to hire American workers.
Amazon.com, Google, and Tesla are among the biggest users of the visas, which let companies bring foreign workers to the U.S. on a temporary basis. The workers overwhelmingly come from India and fill jobs in such fields as software development, computer science, and engineering.
Created by Congress in 1990, the H-1B program is the main pathway to the U.S. for highly skilled foreign workers. Visa holders can eventually become eligible to apply for green cards, which would let them stay in the country indefinitely.
The program is vastly oversubscribed, with new visas capped at 85,000 a year. Companies file hundreds of thousands of petitions for the visas a year. A lottery system helps decide who gets in. Employees of universities and other nonprofits are generally exempt from the cap.
Bu hikaye Mint Hyderabad dergisinin January 02, 2025 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
Mint Hyderabad'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
Mint Hyderabad
Microsoft, Nvidia to invest $15 bn in Anthropic
Microsoft Corp. and Nvidia Corp. are committing to invest upto a combined $15 billion in Anthropic PBC, in a move that ties the AI developer closer to two of the biggest backers for its rival OpenAI.
1 min
November 19, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
Google rolls out Gemini-3, with assurance it will localize India data
Google on Tuesday unveiled Gemini-3, its newest foundational artificial intelligence (AI) model, with a key assurance for India: all data generated by users of its advanced platform will stay within the country's borders.
2 mins
November 19, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
Tech leaders think AI is smart but chimps may beg to differ
Don't underestimate other primates in all the excitement over AI
3 mins
November 19, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
Amazon, Microsoft clouds to face tougher EU rules
Amazon and Microsoft's cloud services may face stricter European Union (EU) competition rules as Brussels probes their market power, the bloc's tech chief said on Tuesday.
1 mins
November 19, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
China's unprecedented investment collapse puzzles economists and threatens growth
China’s collapsing investment is as unprecedented as it is hard to explain.
4 mins
November 19, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
Climate talks turn to risks of extracting critical minerals
Nations are edging closer to sounding the alarm about the perils of extracting and processing critical minerals
2 mins
November 19, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
Sensex rally stands on shaky ground
When the Sensex closed at a new 52-week high on 29 October, it painted a picture of a market in full bloom. But beneath the surface of this headline-grabbing milestone lies a fractured and sobering reality, a Mint analysis reveals.
3 mins
November 19, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
Xiaomi’s EV business registers a profit for the first time
Xiaomi Corp. reported quarterly profit from its electric vehicle (EV) business for the first time, a major milestone for the smartphone maker's ambitious foray into the crowded market.
1 min
November 19, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
BSNL losses widen on depreciation, high finance costs
State-owned Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd (BSNL) reported a loss for the second straight quarter in the current fiscal year after a brief return to profitability in the last two quarters of fiscal 2025.
1 mins
November 19, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
Handloom, textile, sugar firms get respite on quality rules
The Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) on Monday pushed back enforcement of its newly-amended standards for handloom cotton muslin and handloom cotton mix sarees to May 2026, offering relief to weavers who faced steep costs from stricter fibre rules, new testing methods and fresh certification requirements.
1 mins
November 19, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
