Submitted by buncley t3_ztvuph in technology
Scrofuloid t1_j1g4hgl wrote
Reply to comment by NotARedditUser3 in Tech Layoffs Set the Clock Ticking for Foreign Workers by buncley
That's how it works in the US too, for H-1B workers -- except for the ones born in India and China.
SeattleBattle t1_j1gdyu5 wrote
86% of H1B holders in 2021 were from India and China, so that is how the system works for 17 out of 20 people.
Scrofuloid t1_j1gful9 wrote
Is that 86% of people who get H-1B visas, or 86% of people who currently are on an H-1B? If the latter, this could be a result of the long wait time for a green card for those nationalities. i.e. most people who go through the system do not have these insane wait times, but Indian and Chinese applicants are stuck in the system for much longer, and thus make up a disproportionate number of current H-1B holders.
Not that that's a good thing, of course. It's incredibly unfair to them.
SeattleBattle t1_j1gkgnb wrote
The former. 86% of new H1B visas given in 2021 went to India (74%) and China (12%). So the problem you referred to of these countries being overrepresented as H1B holders is only exacerbated by the continued heavy proportion of visas given to citizens of those two countries.
I will note that I am trusting a site called www.y-axis.com for this data though, and I've never heard of them before.
Scrofuloid t1_j1gpvap wrote
Got it. I found almost the exact same numbers on the USCIS site, except that in this case it says it includes both new and continuing cases: https://www.uscis.gov/sites/default/files/document/data/h-1b-petitions-by-gender-country-of-birth-fy2019.pdf
So if I'm reading this right, it looks like the latter of the two scenarios I described.
SeattleBattle t1_j1i3csx wrote
Ahh ok, I definitely could be wrong. I am not an expert on H1Bs. Thanks for doing additional research!
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