I did not want to start a thread for this purpose and since this thread clearly deals with legal immigration I felt this would be the best place to post this.
Firstly I think the time has come for HR1044 and similar bills and the ground has clearly shifted in its favor. One would hope that after 11 years of introducing bills with the same language there would be some understanding among Congressmen about the issues and implications favoring passage. I was still hoping that it would be a clean bill without all the H-1B provisions but if that is what it takes then it is what it is. Things will get complicated further if Rep.Lofgren attempts to add her H-1B reform package from 2017
https://lofgren.house.gov/sites/lofg...017__final.pdf
On a different note I saw this table in my news feed and was stunned by the numbers. I am sure the number crunchers in this forum are already aware of its existence but I focus more on legislation and less on procedure
https://www.uscis.gov/sites/default/...le-FY-2018.pdf
The outsourcing firms that were dominant till about 5-6 years ago have slowed it down to a trickle. I remember an article on the NFAP website by Stuart Anderson mentioning this a few years ago but I did not realize the magnitude of the decline. The immediate instinct is to blame President Trump but it appears like the slowdown was already happening prior to his term. For comparison here are some stats from FY 2014
https://www.epi.org/blog/top-10-h-1b...housands-jobs/
Out of curiosity I searched the USCIS database of employers and sequentially the numbers have trended down from that time point (2014) . If this indeed true I fear for the multiple temples,Apna Bazaars and subzimandis that have opened up hoping this stream would flow forever. I am not in the IT field but I was hoping somebody could shed light on what the reasons were. The NFAP piece seems to suggest a change in the business model and the changing technology landscape. Is this just a temporary blip or more of a systemic structural change? If this is true the future immigrant flows will have to be derived from STEM graduates of American Universities