March 5, 2013
Statement
of Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte
Subcommittee on Immigration and Border Security
Hearing on “Enhancing American Competitiveness through Skilled Immigration”
Subcommittee on Immigration and Border Security
Hearing on “Enhancing American Competitiveness through Skilled Immigration”
Chairman Goodlatte: The contributions of
highly-skilled and educated immigrants to the United States are
well-documented. Seventy-six percent of the patents awarded to our top
patent-producing universities had at least one foreign-born inventor.
According to a recent report, these foreign-born inventors “played especially
large roles in cutting edge fields like semiconductor device manufacturing,
information technology, pulse or digital communications, pharmaceutical drugs
or drug compounds and optics.”
A study by the
American Enterprise Institute and the Partnership for a New American Economy
found that an additional 100 immigrants with advanced STEM degrees from U.S.
universities is associated with an additional 262 jobs for natives. The
study also found that immigrants with advanced degrees pay over $22,000 a year
in taxes yet their families receive less than $2,300 in government benefits.
The United States has
the most generous legal immigration system in the world – providing permanent
residence to over a million immigrants a year. Yet, how many of those
immigrants do we select on the basis of the education and skills they can bring
to America? Only 12% -- barely more than one out of 10 -- and that is
including the immigrants’ family members.
Given the outstanding
track record of immigrants in founding some of our most successful companies,
how many immigrants do we select on the basis of their entrepreneurial
talents? Less than 1% -- and that is only if they already have the
hundreds of thousands of dollars needed to participate in the investor visa
program.
Does any of this make
sense, given the intense international economic competition that America
faces? Does any of this make sense, given that many talented foreign
graduates of our best universities are giving up hope of getting a green card
and are packing up and moving home to work for our competitors? Does any
of this make sense, given that Indian nationals with advanced degrees sought
out by American industry have to wait over eight years for a green card?
Does any of this make sense, given that Australia, the United Kingdom and
Canada each select over 60% of immigrants on the basis of skills and
education? The answer is clearly not.
It is as if we
purposely add weights to handicap our horse in order to give our competitors a
better shot at the winner’s circle. This just doesn’t make sense as
national economic policy. The House of
Representatives acted last year to rechart our course. We voted by over a
hundred vote margin to pass legislation by former Chairman Smith that
redirected 50,000 or so green cards a year from winners of the diversity visa
lottery toward foreign students graduating from our universities with advanced
degrees in STEM fields. That bill would have made all Americans
winners. Unfortunately, at the direction of the White House, the bill
died in the Senate.
In this new Congress,
we can rechart our nation’s course anew. We should look at all aspects of
high-skilled immigration policy. We can look for ways to improve our
temporary visa programs for skilled workers – such as H-1B and L visas.
We can look for ways to improve our temporary visa program for entrepreneurs –
the E-2 program. We can look for ways to offer green cards to aspiring
entrepreneurs that don’t demand that they themselves be rich but that instead
rely on the judgment of the venture capitalists who have funded them. We
can look for ways to reduce the backlogs for second and third preference
employment-based green cards. And we can seek to help the United States
retain more of the foreign students who graduate from our universities.
Of course, at the
same time, we need to ensure that whatever we do brightens rather than darkens
the career prospects of American students and American workers. Even
newly-minted PhDs are not immune to sometimes bleak employment prospects.
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