Computerworld H-1B database
Computerworld H-1B database
Date: Tuesday, February 24, 2009 12:04 AM
<<<<< JOB DESTRUCTION NEWSLETTER No. 1981 -- 2/23/2009 >>>>>
Computerworld put a database online for 2008 H-1B visas. You can do searches
by the employer name or number of H-1Bs.
The database is at this link. It's fun to play with so give it a whirl.
http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9128436
Patrick Thibodeau's article below makes some interesting points, but his
message might be confusing because he didn't mention the fact that Microsoft
contracts with the same bodyshops that are the top H-1B users.
What that means in a practical sense is that the database shows Microsoft with
1037 approved H-1B visas, but the number of H-1B visa holders they actually
hired is much higher. We don't know how many of the H-1Bs from the bodyshops
were hired by Microsoft, but the percentage is substantial.
As an example, in 2008 Tata got 1539 visas. While we don't know how many of
those 1539 H-1B visa holders went to Microsoft to work, there is no doubt the
two companies are very cozy. Check this out if you have any doubts:
http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2005/may05/05-10MicrosoftTataPR.mspx
Microsoft and Tata Consultancy Services to Deliver Connected Services
Framework to Telecommunications Providers
Infosys was awarded 4559 visas in 2008. Check this out:
http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2009/jan09/01-29MSInfosysPR.mspx
Microsoft and Infosys Technologies Create New Alliance Focusing on Supply
Chain Visibility and Collaboration for Manufacturers
Wipro was awarded 2683 visas in 2008. Check this out:
http://www.wipro.com/webpages/aboutus/alliances/microsoft.htm
Wipro -- Microsoft : A strategic relationship
Please allow me to do some gloating now. I received a lot of criticism when I
wrote that the Satyam scandal would have little effect on H-1B and there would
be no net effect on India's IT business. I went further to praise India for
slammming the jail door on the Satyam executives while in contrast the U.S.
coddled Bernie Madoff. See "Is Satyam Scandal a Silver Bullet to Stop
Outsourcing?, No. 1956 -- 1/12/2009". My answer to the question was "NO", but
it didn't stop overeager bloggers from declaring the scandal to be the
beginning of the end of Indian offshoring and the H-1B program. Many activists
routinely dismissed my studied conclusion. Now Thibodeau is using numbers to
prove my point.
Even though Satyam Computer Services Ltd. revealed late last year
that it had substantially misreported its financial statements,
leading to a scandal that has put its future at risk, it received
approval for 1,917 H-1B visas. That's far in excess of the 1,396
it got in fiscal year 2007.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9128450
Indian outsourcers, Microsoft top the list of H-1B users in '08 Infosys
Technologies used the most overall; Microsoft led among U.S. firms Patrick
Thibodeau February 23, 2009 (Computerworld) WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Microsoft
Corp. was the top U.S.-based recipient of H-1B visas in 2008, receiving
approval for
1,037 visas, slightly more than in 2007. But the largest users of the program
remain the major Indian offshore IT services firms -- and their use of H-1Bs
appears to be increasing, according to government data.
(See a searchable listing of the companies receiving H-1B visas in 2008.)
The importance of the H-1B visa program to India-based outsourcers is clear
from the fiscal 2008 approval list compiled by the U.S. Citizenship and
Immigration Service (USCIS). That fiscal year ended Sept. 30.
The H-1B visa program has been one of the most controversial issues in the IT
industry. High-tech firms argue that the visas are needed so they can recruit
talented graduates from U.S. universities. But opponents say the program is
being used to push down wages and enable the offshoring of IT jobs.
The program is currently capped at 65,000 annually, with another 20,000 set
aside for advanced-degree graduates of U.S. universities.
In the latest listing of visa holders, Infosys Technologies Ltd. remained the
top user, receiving approval for 4,559 -- the same number it got in fiscal
2007. Otherwise, the numbers for other major users varied, with some of the
offshore firms showing sizable increases in their use of the program.
In second place after Infosys was Wipro Ltd., which received approval for
2,678 H-1B visas in 2008. The year before, Wipro got 2,567.
Even though Satyam Computer Services Ltd. revealed late last year that it had
substantially misreported its financial statements, leading to a scandal that
has put its future at risk, it received approval for 1,917 H-1B visas. That's
far in excess of the 1,396 it got in fiscal year 2007.
Fourth on the list was Tata Consultancy Services Ltd., which used 1,539 visas
last year, almost double the 797 it got in 2007. Microsoft was fifth on the
list, winning approval for 1,018 visas, 59 more than it got in 2007.
Among other U.S. firms, Google Inc., which publicly complained in a blog post
last year about the H-1B system, received 248 visas -- far less than it
wanted. And Lehman Brothers Inc., which failed late last year, received 130
visas.
There has been a recent backlash in Congress over the use of the visas. The
$787 billion federal stimulus bill it approved earlier this month imposed
restrictions on H-1B use by financial services firms that receive bailout
funds.
Federal enforcement of visa laws related to the use of H-1Bs may be growing as
well. Earlier this month, federal agents said they had arrested 11 people in
six states in a crackdown on H-1B visa fraud; unsealed documents showed how
the visa process was used to undercut the salaries of U.S.
workers.
At one point, Microsoft's H-1B hiring drew the attention of Sen. Charles
Grassley (R-Iowa), who last month wrote to the company and urged it to give
U.S. workers priority over H-1B visa holders in its plan to layoff 5,000
employees.
The USCIS distributes H-1B visas via a lottery system because applications
have been exceeding the visa cap routinely in recent years.
The USCIS will begin taking applications for the next fiscal year on April
1 and will distribute the new visas on Oct. 1, at the start of the 2010 fiscal
year.
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