The H-1B's Fall from Grace

Jasodhara Banerjee & N.S. Ramnath, 05.27.11, 06:00 PM EDT

Tech companies are sending fewer employees to the U.S. as the once sought after visa loses favor.

Over the past few years, the H-1B visa has come to symbolize several things: Economic growth, the state of Indian IT companies, the great off shoring debate and even election manifestos in the U.S.

But, above all, it has been symbolic of the great American Dream. It has been the ticket that takes you one step short of the Green Card and all things good.

In 2007, the number of applications that flooded the offices of the U.S. Citizen and Immigration Services (USCIS) filled the 2008 cap of 65,000 in the first three days of the office accepting applications from April 1. In 2008, this quota was reached within the first week of April. One year later, the 2010 quota was filled only by December 2009. The 2011 cap was reached only by January 2011. When applications opened for the 2012 quota on April 1 this year, there were only 5,900 applications towards the 65,000 cap in the first week. By April 22, the number had risen to 8,000.

What changed between 2008 and 2010 that made the H-1B lose its charm among Indians and Indian IT firms?

IT companies have been the largest applicants for the H-1B, which allows U.S. businesses to employ foreign workers in specialty occupations that require theoretical or technical expertise. Such workers include scientists, engineers and computer programmers.

In 2010, Infosys led the pack of H-1B applicants with 3,792 applications. It has remained on top of the list since 2007, with Cognizant, Wipro and Microsoft being among the top five. The top 12 companies in India that applied for H-1Bs in 2010 are from the IT industry.

There are three factors that need to be accounted for between 2008 and 2010. The most obvious is the economic slowdown. The demand for H-1B visas closely follows the demand for IT manpower, which again closely follows the demand for IT services. Not only did the revenues dip to single- digit figures during the financial crisis, visibility of future revenues was also low. Even those who believed that growth would eventually return to the IT sector, weren't sure when that would happen and they were in no hurry to apply for the visa.

The second is a steep hike--of $2,000--in the visa application fee (this applies to companies where more than half the employees in the U.S. use work visas). The application now costs between $3,000 and $5,000. The U.S. claimed the extra money would be used to increase its border security. The move would not really affect IT firms based in the U.S., but would affect those that work in other countries but send employees to the U.S.

While it would be possible for some IT firms to pass this extra cost on to clients, given the large volume of work, it would be more difficult for mid-tier companies to do so and the extra cost would eat into profit margins.


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The third factor has been an increased scrutiny of visa applications, with the U.S. government focusing on Punjab and Hyderabad for fraudulent applications. Visa rejection rates have apparently doubled (even though it's still in single digits) even among bigger companies. Smaller companies face higher rejection rates.

In the context of increased fees, higher rejection rates, difficulties in getting interview appointments and excessive requests for evidence, a CLSA report by analysts Nimish Joshi, Bhavtosh Vajpayee and Arati Mishra in March 2011 said: "H-1B and L-1 visas remain core to Indian IT companies' onsite-offshore business model. Procedural or regulatory hurdles here are bound to impact Indian firms... Unfolding events on the visa front over the last few months have been disconcerting."

Although the economy is looking up once again and companies such as Infosys and Wipro have posted profits for 2010-2011, the recovery has not been as robust as expected. With off-shore jobs yet to match the prerecession figures, the focus is still on cutting costs.

Companies are doing this by tweaking the ratio between on-site and offshore workers, sending fewer employees to the U.S. and utilizing them more efficiently in their Indian offices.

Nandita Gurjar, who heads human resources at Infosys, says there is an issue of growth in the IT sector and also the fact that companies in the U.S. are hiring more people from within the country rather than taking people from India.

"We are working around this by hiring people in the U.S. Last year, we hired 1,000 people and we think the number would double this year," says Gurjar. She adds that IT firms are staggering their H-1B applications round the year simply because that is an option. It would not be possible to predict if there will be a drop in the number of applications Infosys makes, she says.

The other option--one that industry leader TCS seems to have settled on--is to take the L-1 route to the U.S., instead of the H-1B. Visas issued in the L-1 category involve transfers within the same company, and employees do not need to be paid the minimum wage levels of the U.S., which are much higher than what an employee on an L-1 would be paid.

TCS used to be one of the highest users of H-1B visas till 2008. In 2009, its H-1B visa usage was in single digits, although its off shore-on site ratio is similar to that of other IT majors. The reason given for the dramatic drop is the use of L-1 visas.

The number of L-1 visas issued to India has risen from 2,276 in 1998 to 37,145 in 2010. On the other hand, the number of H-1Bs increased from 40,246 to 54,598 during the same period. It was only between 2003 and 2007 that the number of H-1Bs doubled, from 42,245 to 83,464.


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If more IT companies adopt this policy, it is the U.S. that stands to lose out on the economic benefits of having on-site workers (contributions to social security alone by Indian firms amount to about $1 billion), rather than cutting down on off-shoring.

This article appears in the May 20 issue of Forbes India, a Forbes Media licensee.

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