Opinion

IN OTHER WORDS

IN OTHER WORDS

By IN OTHER WORDS

Visa shortage

The US is facing shortage of highly trained US personnel. For the fiscal year that began last Oct.1, Congress authorised 65,000 of the specialised H-1B visas for foreign scientists, engineers, and workers in a handful of other fields. Congress should expand the quota for next year. The commencement lists of universities awarding advanced degrees show more than half are foreign nationals. US-born students are somewhat better represented at Boston-area universities, but even here, 45 per cent of all engineering doctorate degrees go to foreign nationals. But the nation gets no payback from this when, because of a shortfall in visas, a foreign-born student must find employment in a foreign country.

Opposition to expanding the H-1B quota comes from the AFL-CIO. Labour unions worry that employers use the visa program to get workers at lower salaries. A long-term argument against granting employers greater use of H-1Bs is that it takes pressure off the US educational system to produce more scientists and engineers. Improvement of science and mathematics education in US schools has to be a priority for policy makers, educators and employers. More countries are opening their borders to highly trained workers from other nations, and some countries are getting more US-trained workers to return. — The Boston Globe