A new EPI report sheds light on the H-1B visa program and the prevailing wage levels in the program, finding that nearly all H-1B employers—including major U.S. tech firms—are using the program to pay migrant workers well below market wages. The report’s release comes after President Trump issued an executive order to suspend permanent immigration…
Yeah… I couldn’t care less. They are the modern-day Union busting scabs who swoop in when CEOs need to cut budgets. I would love to see the number of H1B visa holders who drive tesla. I’ll tell you right now it’s a huge portion of them. The overseas company usually foots the bill for housing, and most of the money is sent to where it is NOT below median wage. The whole reason that CFO went down this road was to save money and pay them less. The company pays the outsourcer for contracted work and has 0 insight into how much of that makes it to the H1B visa holder. Everyone is in the loop and knows exactly what they are doing.
As a former h1b worker, everything you said was absolutely wrong.
Like, all of it.
Not one bit of that is true. Where do you get this stuff?
I’ve worked at a smaller company specializing in h1bs. They paid poorly and while the people there were generally nice, most of them were not highly skilled, and they would take a lot of abuse Americans would quit over.
That experience is why I’m so anti H1B.
When I outsourced several departments to HCL. Managed that contract for 5 years. Spent lots of time hobnobbing with the Sr. Leadership of both companies and their H1B transplants. I’ve worked in medical, education, and banking, doing the same thing, and the story has been the same each time. The management and sales staff jet around in their leased Teslas. The staff they bring in were generally good people but almost always lacking the actual skills to replace the workers that we let go. Worked for a US based outsourcer also and pretty much the same. Sales made promises that we knew we could’t deliver. There are probably exceptions out there, but it’s not the norm. HCL was the worst, but Infosys, Accenture… each one I have worked with has been the same. Now, there might be other H1B visas that don’t come in this way… but it was NEVER about not being able to find the right local talent.