Most of the H-1B visas that the U.S. government granted for workers in computer jobs are for people from India, a Computerworld analysis shows. Most of the H-1B visas that the U.S. government granted for workers in computer jobs are for people from India, a Computerworld analysis shows. Almost 86% of the H-1B visas that the U.S. granted for computer jobs went to Indian workers, according to the analysis. Most of those H-1B visa holders work for outsourcing companies, such as Infosys and Tata Consultancy Services (TCS). China was far behind in second place at just over 5% of H-1B visas for IT occupations, and no other nation rose above 1%, according to data from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. About 76,000 H-1B visas were issued to people in computer occupations in 2014. IT services companies “apparently cannot get enough Indian programmers, which has little to do with a shortage of competent natives for these types of jobs, but a lot to do with the industry’s business model,” said Lindsay Lowell, director of policy studies at Georgetown University’s Institute for the Study of International Migration. The outsourcing companies prefer to hire “young H-1B programmers because the visa offers control over this contracted short-term workforce, it permits them to pay less than they would for experienced natives and they cultivate programmers who can better serve their clients after returning home to India,” Lowell said. The numbers are widely different when compared to H-1B visas for engineers, which includes electrical, mechanical, civil, chemical, aeronautical and other specialties. In that category, Indian workers are still on top with 47% of the visas, or 8,103, followed by China with 19.5%; Canada, 3.4%; Korea 2.4%; Mexico, 2.2%; and Taiwan and Iran with 2.2% each, according to the government data. The hiring of H-1B workers has raised concerns after it was reported that some U.S. companies were using IT outsourcing companies to replace their IT shops, leaving American IT professionals out of work. Some of the U.S. workers had to train their replacements, who worked for IT outsourcing companies. The issue has led to lawsuits by laid-off IT workers and prompted calls in Congress for an investigation into the use of H-1B visas. Lawyers for the outsourcing companies have said there is no requirement for a foreign company doing business in the U.S. to employ U.S. workers. The companies are only required to comply with immigration laws. With reports by Patrick Thibodeau and Sharon Machlis at Computerworld. Related content opinion The Importance of Identity Management in Security By Charles Pelton Nov 28, 2023 5 mins Cybercrime Artificial Intelligence Data Management brandpost Sponsored by Rocket Software Why data virtualization is critical for business success Data is your most valuable resource—but only if you can access it fast enough to address present challenges. Data virtualization is the key. By Milan Shetti, CEO of Rocket Software Nov 28, 2023 4 mins Digital Transformation brandpost Sponsored by Rocket Software The hybrid approach: Get the best of both mainframe and cloud Cloud computing and modernization often go hand in hand, but that doesn’t mean the mainframe should be left behind. A hybrid approach offers the most value, enabling businesses to get the best of both worlds. By Milan Shetti, CEO Rocket Software Nov 28, 2023 4 mins Digital Transformation brandpost Sponsored by Rimini Street Dear Oracle Cloud…I need my own space Access results from a recent Rimini Street survey about why enterprises are rethinking their Oracle relationship and cloud strategy. By Tanya O'Hara Nov 28, 2023 5 mins Cloud Computing Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe