With new ‘talent visas,’ other countries lure workers trained at U.S. universities

Author: 
Jon Marcus
Date of Publication: 
June, 2023
Source Organization: 
Other

When Cansu (pronounced “Johnsu”) Deniz Bayrak was deciding where to emigrate from her native Turkey, she first considered San Francisco.

Only in her 20s, she had already co-created an e-commerce website that rose to the top of its category in her home country, gotten snatched up by a tech company, then been poached by another tech firm. But she saw more opportunity in the United States, where there is a projected demand for more than 160,000 new software developers and related specialists per year, and where tech companies said in a survey that recruiting them is their biggest business challenge.

Bayrak quickly learned, however, that to come to the United States, she’d need an employer sponsor. Even then, she’d have to enter a lottery for an H-1B visa, with only one-in-four odds of being approved. If she was laid off, she’d have 60 days to find a new job, or she’d likely have to leave.

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Citation: 

Marcus, J. (2023, June). With new ‘talent visas,’ other countries lure workers trained at U.S. universities. The Hechinger Report. https://hechingerreport.org/thwarted-by-the-u-s-immigration-system-highl...

 

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