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Big Tech and finance companies are telling H-1B employees to get to the US in under 24 hours

hist78

Well-known member
Employees at major tech and financial companies on H-1B visas were told to stay in the US following President Donald Trump's surprise executive order that makes it far more expensive — and potentially impossible — for them to return if they travel abroad.

Amazon, Microsoft, JPMorgan, and Meta are among those companies, per employees and internal communications reviewed by Business Insider.

On Friday, Trump signed an executive order requiring companies to pay a $100,000 fee for each H-1B application or renewal. The order, which takes effect on September 21 at 12:01 a.m. ET, effectively bars H-1B workers from reentering the country after that deadline unless their sponsoring employer pays the fee.


 
Employees at major tech and financial companies on H-1B visas were told to stay in the US following President Donald Trump's surprise executive order that makes it far more expensive — and potentially impossible — for them to return if they travel abroad.

Amazon, Microsoft, JPMorgan, and Meta are among those companies, per employees and internal communications reviewed by Business Insider.

On Friday, Trump signed an executive order requiring companies to pay a $100,000 fee for each H-1B application or renewal. The order, which takes effect on September 21 at 12:01 a.m. ET, effectively bars H-1B workers from reentering the country after that deadline unless their sponsoring employer pays the fee.



It’s very much an anti-business approach. It hurts the US ability to compete on a global scale.
 
Employees at major tech and financial companies on H-1B visas were told to stay in the US following President Donald Trump's surprise executive order that makes it far more expensive — and potentially impossible — for them to return if they travel abroad.

Amazon, Microsoft, JPMorgan, and Meta are among those companies, per employees and internal communications reviewed by Business Insider.

On Friday, Trump signed an executive order requiring companies to pay a $100,000 fee for each H-1B application or renewal. The order, which takes effect on September 21 at 12:01 a.m. ET, effectively bars H-1B workers from reentering the country after that deadline unless their sponsoring employer pays the fee.



It seems that the Whitehouse and Trump himself have no rigidrous process to formulate a thoughtful policy and regulations.


New H-1B visa fee will not apply to existing holders, official says

 
This will of course not cause these big companies to pay the shake down, but to outsource even more.

And it will be removed or reduced for most companies in short order. TACO.
 
This will of course not cause these big companies to pay the shake down, but to outsource even more.
I think more likely it will cause more companies to open or expand their offices in India. This will reduce job openings in the US. It's not a great solution, but many (most?) high tech companies already have facilities in India.

China is more of a challenge, but perhaps offices in intermediate countries would work for hiring Chinese candidates without opening R&D offices in China.
 
I think more likely it will cause more companies to open or expand their offices in India. This will reduce job openings in the US. It's not a great solution, but many (most?) high tech companies already have facilities in India.

China is more of a challenge, but perhaps offices in intermediate countries would work for hiring Chinese candidates without opening R&D offices in China.
most companies as you mentioned has been moving team, or outsourced, to India for decades. This decision is not going to impact that trend much. For talents companies deem cannot find in India, they will do the H1B, will the additional $100K fee change the decision one way or another?
 
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