Highlights: 

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1. US president Donald Trump ordered a review of the US visa programme for bringing high-skilled foreign workers into the country 

2. The US government presently uses a lottery system to award 65,000 visas every year 

3. Trump administration has accused IT companies of paying lower wages than that set by the country's Department of Labour

The recent announcement of the US president Donald Trump ordering a review of H-1B visa programme that permits bringing high-skilled foreign workers into the country is likely to increase costs and hurt businesses of Indian IT services, according to experts.  

Trump on Tuesday ordered a review of the US visa programme for bringing high-skilled foreign workers into the country, putting technology firms and the outsourcing companies that serve them on notice that possible changes may be ahead, Reuters reported on Wednesday. 

According to the news report, the order was vague on many front and did not change existing rules, but one objective, said Trump aides, is to modify or replace the current lottery for H-1B visas with a merit-based system that would restrict the visas to highly skilled workers.  

Trump announced the order and made remarks at a visit to the headquarters of Snap-On Inc, tool maker in Wisconsin.

The Economic Times reported on March 20   

"The company is not applying for visas for employees with under four years of experience. We are talking to clients about offshoring more work to India, and the work done by  junior employees can be brought to India,” the report said citing one executive at the company, as saying.

Commenting on complying with the US visa norms, TCS has said that it will tweak its business models in sync with the country's visa rules.

"...We will have to wait and see. And we will definitely tweak our model in order to ensure that we remain compliant (with the visa norms) and at the same time meet customer demands," PTI reported quoting TCS global head and vice president-HR Ajoy Mukherjee, as saying to reporters.

Asserting that TCS has been compliant with visa norms, he said the company will "definitely continue to stay in the US and continue to meet customer requirements" in its largest market.

ALSO READ: TCS unperturbed by possible changes to H1-B visa regime: CEO

 

"Nothing is being proposed that would impact or change the FY18 H-1B lottery that is currently underway. The proposed changes are forward-looking and non-specific. Nasscom member companies support efforts to root out any abuses that may be occurring in the H-1B system," Nasscom said in a press release issued late evening on Tuesday.

"The fundamental issue is the shortage of highly-skilled domestic talent in the United States, in IT, healthcare, education, and other fields. The H-1B visa system exists specifically because of the persistent shortage of highly-skilled domestic talent in the United States (US)," it said.

The new executive order on immigration norms is likely to impact the US businesses and their efforts to remain competitive on par with other countries.

"Any onerous additional restrictions on the H-1B and L-1 visa systems would hurt thousands of US businesses and their efforts  to be more competitive by hindering access to needed talent," Nasscom said. 

According to Business Standard report,  Indian firms over the past few years have reduced dependency on H-1B visas, while US firms such as Accenture, IBM and Google have stepped up hiring engineers from India and send them on the coveted visa. However, there has been no backlash by the US administration on this.

"The executive order is expected to commission the Department of Homeland security to review the current H-1B programme as the US administration wants to only allow highly-skilled foreign nationals who will contribute to the US economy," the report said quoting a global immigration and employment law firm LawQuest  managing partner Poorvi Chothani, as saying. 

"The thrust is on the economy and not only on jobs. It is horrible that they are naming some of the large Indian companies against which there is no concrete evidence of abuse," Chothani said.

"But there are instances of several other companies that have abused the system and brought the entire Indian IT sector to this position. There also are instances where some companies have used business visas for their Indian employees to go and work on short term projects or in rotation on larger projects, which is completely illegal," Chothani added.

She said that going forward the US immigration classifications will be more strict and Indian companies should see stringent scrutiny of applications and compliance, from the US government.

This order will, however, not have an impact on the applications filed this month for the current year.