Active Stocks
Thu Apr 18 2024 15:59:07
  1. Tata Steel share price
  2. 160.00 -0.03%
  1. Power Grid Corporation Of India share price
  2. 280.20 2.13%
  1. NTPC share price
  2. 351.40 -2.19%
  1. Infosys share price
  2. 1,420.55 0.41%
  1. Wipro share price
  2. 444.30 -0.96%
Business News/ News / World/  In Donald Trump’s H-1B visa crackdown, Indian students weigh Canada, Ireland
BackBack

In Donald Trump’s H-1B visa crackdown, Indian students weigh Canada, Ireland

As uncertainty looms large in the face of Donald Trump's H-1B visa crackdown and racial attacks in US, Canada seems to be the preferred alternative for Indian students

A path to employment is crucial for the many Indians who count on a mix of loans, scholarships and family savings to fund their overseas degrees. Photo: Hemant Mishra/MintPremium
A path to employment is crucial for the many Indians who count on a mix of loans, scholarships and family savings to fund their overseas degrees. Photo: Hemant Mishra/Mint

Kolkata/Chennai: Rahul Kolli was all set to head to the US for a Master’s degree in data science with admission to Michigan Technological University and a Rs2.7 million student loan in place.

Then Donald Trump was elected president and promised a crackdown on work visas that he says undercut salaries for Americans. Kolli has since changed tack and is instead going to the University of Dublin in Ireland, where he says the total cost would be half of what he’d budgeted for in the US and where he plans to work after his studies.

For 27-year-old SAP consultant Rohit Madhav, it’s recent attacks on people of Indian ethnicity in America that made his parents cautious about his higher-education plans. They’ve asked him to widen his search beyond the US—to Canada, New Zealand and local institutions as well, he said.

Such concerns are driving a decline in applications at some US universities as Indians reconsider what has long been their first choice for overseas study, fuelled by the success of immigrants like Sun Microsystems Inc. Co-Founder Vinod Khosla and Google Inc. chief executive officer Sundar Pichai. Now, safety and doubts about a path to employment are being weighed instead as the Trump administration begins to reform the H-1B foreign worker visa program that’s used more by people from India than any other nationality.

“The recent spate of racists attacks on Indians is fearsome," said Mumbai-based Madhav, who plans to pursue a management degree and fund his studies with a loan. “If I stay back in the US for work, then I can repay the loan amount in two-to-three years. But, if I come back to India for work then it may take me seven-to-eight years."

A path to employment is crucial for the many Indians who count on a mix of loans, scholarships and family savings to fund their overseas degrees. At a record 165,918, they formed the second-largest group of international students on US campuses in 2015-16, according to a report from the Institute of International Education.

Foreign students in the US can do up to a year of practical training, extendable by those with qualifications in certain science, technology, engineering or math fields. More than three-quarters of Indians pursue such degrees, according to IIE, giving them a better chance of finding full-time jobs and getting one of a limited number of H-1B visas issued each year.

During his presidential campaign, Trump called the H-1B a “cheap labour program."

His administration on 31 March issued guidelines requiring more information for computer programmers applying for H-1Bs to prove the jobs require advanced knowledge and experience. Lawmakers have also introduced several bills that would force broader reform.

The visa program modifications “will be what will drive changes in the pattern of enrolment with international students in the United States," Timothy Brunold, dean of admission at the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, said by phone 6 March. “The question in our mind is very much next year or subsequent years. May be students will start looking elsewhere and planning in different directions due to the uncertainty."

Given the focus on skills, the greater impact to date has been on applications from India to undergraduate programs. Twenty-six percent of institutions in a recent poll reported a decline from India at that level, while 15% have seen a fall at the graduate level, according to a survey of more than 250 US higher education providers by the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers and partner organizations.

Amid those declines, Canada seems the preferred alternative, said Vijay Sricharan, the Chennai-based business head at Manya Education Pvt. Ltd, which helps about 5,000 students secure admissions in foreign universities every year.

The UK saw Indian student numbers drop by about half to 19,485 in 2014-15 from 2010-11, according to data compiled on IIE’s website, after tightening its post-study visa norms. In 2009, a series of attacks against Indian students in Australia saw numbers drop to 19,238 in 2010 from the previous year’s 26,398.

Akshay Kumar Varanasi is in his final year of an engineering degree at the Indian Institute of Technology, Madras. An attack in Kansas—which left an Indian engineer dead and his friend wounded— has scared his parents, he said, though they “cannot say no to me going to the US."

A perception that the US is becoming a racist country where Indians aren’t welcome would be a serious concern for campuses trying to attract international students, said Karan Gupta, who runs a student advisory service in Mumbai. There’s no indication of that now and one can’t judge the country by the acts of a few, he said.

External affairs minister Sushma Swaraj noted in Parliament last month that American authorities have responded strongly to the attacks.

For Gupta, whose Mumbai-based Karan Gupta Consulting advises close to 1,000 students a year, only those focused on working overseas are considering alternatives to the US. Ninety percent of his clients still plan to study there, he said. Bloomberg

Unlock a world of Benefits! From insightful newsletters to real-time stock tracking, breaking news and a personalized newsfeed – it's all here, just a click away! Login Now!

Catch all the Business News, Market News, Breaking News Events and Latest News Updates on Live Mint. Download The Mint News App to get Daily Market Updates.
More Less
Published: 10 Apr 2017, 08:39 AM IST
Next Story footLogo
Recommended For You
Switch to the Mint app for fast and personalized news - Get App