IT cos voice concern over proposed US law on hiring

Published on Mon, Nov 23, 2009 at 10:23 |  Source : Business Line

Updated at Mon, Nov 23, 2009 at 10:27  

Like this story, share it with millions of investors on M3
0
0
Share on Tumblr
IT cos voice concern over proposed US law on hiring

RELATED NEWS

Two US senators have introduced a legislation seeking to prohibit companies that lay off large number of American workers, from subsequently hiring temporary workers (such as tech professionals) from outside the US.

The proposed 'Employ America Act', if passed, could severely hit tech companies that had resorted to axing jobs during the economic downturn even as they continued to file for H-1B visas.

The IT industry has expressed concern over the proposed legislation given its ramifications on businesses. But industry watchers also point out that the possibility of the new legislation being passed on a standalone basis may be somewhat low at a time when the US is slated to look at comprehensive immigration reform next year.

When contacted, Ameet Nivsarkar, Vice-President of Nasscom, said, "The proposed legislation will be painful for global companies, if it becomes a law. While it may not get cleared as a standalone legislation, what we need to watch out for is whether it gets tagged as a provision to other must-pass Bills. We are constantly monitoring the situation."

The proposed Employ America legislation has been introduced by Senator Bernie Sanders and Senator Chuck Grassley - the duo had tagged similar provisions to the economic stimulus package with an aim to prohibit companies receiving bailout from the Troubled Asset Relief Program from replacing laid-off American workers with guest workers from overseas.

The Employ America legislation would require employers hiring temporary workers such as IT professionals to certify that they have not resorted to mass layoffs in the past 12 months and that they do not intend to fire in the future.

Companies that have announced layoffs of over 50 American workers in the past year could be subjected to the prohibition.

The two US lawmakers have claimed that the tech industry, a major employer of H-1B workers, has laid off over 3,45,000 workers since August 2008.

"With the unemployment rate still climbing and millions of people looking for work, we have a responsibility to ensure that companies do not use the temporary guest-worker programme to replace American workers with cheaper labour from overseas," said Senator Sanders, a member of the Senate Budget Committee.

Earlier this year, Grassley, along with Senator Richard Durbin, introduced a legislation that, among other measures, proposed to prohibit employers from hiring additional H-1B and L-1 guest workers if over 50 per cent of their employees were already in that category.

The 50:50 provision as it was dubbed, raised the hackles of the Indian IT industry, which felt that such a clause would not only impact the outsourcing per se but also hurt competitiveness of the US.

However, the passage of the Durbin-Grassley legislation may be remote given that comprehensive immigration reforms appear to be just around the corner.

Taken from Business Line

  

More on Moneycontrol

Trending News

Business News

Government to directly check BBM and other IM services
Competition ahoy: Monkey 1, Sensex in neck-and-neck race "Competition ahoy: Monkey 1, Sensex in neck-and-neck race"

Sources Say BCCI Sahara Meet BCCI Agrees To All Other Demands Put In By Sahara

The latest earning numbers FIRST on CNBC-TV18
Videos

Feb 12 2012, 11:20

See more rally even if Greek crisis drags on: RBS

- in FII View

Feb 10 2012, 21:39

Truck demand sluggish; margins down 80bps: Shriram Trans

- in Results Boardroom

Interviews

Feb 12 2012, 15:00 | Source: CNBC-TV18

Bosch sees 3-5% growth in 2012, bets big on India  

Feb 11 2012, 11:52 | Source: CNBC-TV18

TCS to expand centers in N.America; CY12 focus on Japan  

Subscribe to

Moneycontrol Newsletters

Moneycontrol.com offers you a choice of various sectoral and other newsletters for FREE!

Follow moneycontrol.com