Fortune | FORTUNE 10月01日
H-1B签证费上涨阻碍创新与人才引进
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近期H-1B签证费用的上涨正成为美国创新和吸引全球顶尖人才的严重阻碍,可能削弱硅谷的全球领导地位。文章指出,美国经济的繁荣和创新优势很大程度上得益于其吸引和留住全球人才的能力,许多成功的美国科技公司,包括Uber、Tesla、Zoom、Microsoft和Google的领导者,都曾是移民。新的费用结构将导致技术巨头和资金雄厚的初创企业在招聘H-1B人才方面占据优势,形成人才供应瓶颈,可能迫使许多有才华的专业人士转向其他国家寻找机会,或返回母国。加拿大和中国已开始积极吸引全球科技人才,这给美国敲响了警钟。文章强调,美国的高等教育吸引力也将因此减弱,影响未来创新生态系统的发展。作者结合自身经历,认为当前政策将阻碍像他一样曾经受益于H-1B签证的未来科技领袖。文章呼吁政策制定者在更新H-1B签证政策时,应认识到人才的全球流动性,以桥梁而非壁垒的方式吸引全球最优秀的人才,否则可能面临被超越的风险。

💡 H-1B签证费上涨对美国创新和人才引进构成严重威胁。文章指出,许多成功的美国科技公司和领袖人物的崛起都离不开H-1B签证的助力,包括Uber、Tesla、Zoom、Microsoft和Google等。高昂的费用将限制初创企业和中小型科技公司吸引和留住顶尖人才的能力,可能导致人才流失,削弱美国的创新优势。

🌍 全球人才争夺日益激烈,其他国家已开始积极应对。加拿大和中国正推出新举措吸引高技能人才,包括为可能符合H-1B资格的人才提供“明确的优惠”。这表明,如果美国不能有效吸引和留住人才,其在全球科技领域的领导地位将面临严峻挑战,其他国家将填补空缺。

🎓 美国高等教育的吸引力将受影响,阻碍未来创新生态。文章担忧,H-1B签证政策的不确定性和高成本将劝退一批有潜力成为未来创新者的优秀国际学生,他们可能选择其他国家接受教育,导致美国未来难以吸引到那些曾驱动硅谷蓬勃发展的顶尖头脑。

🌉 吸引人才应以“桥梁”而非“壁垒”为导向。作者结合自身在硅谷的经历,强调美国科技的崛起是建立在吸引全球最优秀人才的基础之上的。他认为,政策应致力于创造一个欢迎人才的环境,而不是设置障碍,否则在人才全球流动的经济体中,美国将面临被超越的风险。资本会追随人才,而拥抱人才的国家将蓬勃发展。

The recent H-1B visa fee hikes aren’t just policy changes, they’re serious impediments to innovation that will chip away at the foundation that built Silicon Valley’s global leadership.  

America has the world’s largest economy and is a world leader in innovation because it attracts and retains the world’s best talent to work on small, high-risk startups that one day blossom into large-cap economic titan. Almost 50% of US companies above $1 billion in valuation have one co-founder who is an immigrant. Uber’s co-founder Garrett Camp is a Canadian immigrant. Elon Musk used the H-1B as a South African immigrant to build Tesla and SpaceX. Eric Yuan was famously rejected eight times for his H-1B to work at Cisco — he then went on to start Zoom, a company that dissolves borders between nations.

There are many such examples — Jayshree Ullal of Arista Networks, Aravind Srinivas of Perplexity, Satya Nadella of Microsoft and Sundar Pichai of Google — none of these leaders would have stayed in the US if the H-1B program weren’t in place. 

The new H-1B fee structure will, in the immediate term, create a two-tiered system that hands hiring power to tech giants and only the well-funded startups who can absorb the $100,000 surcharges for H-1B talent. This would create a chokepoint in supply and demand wherein a lot of the highly talented folks who otherwise could have worked on H-1B would no longer be able to and would head to other countries for opportunities, or return to their home countries. 

This is already happening. Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney recently said U.S. visa changes for skilled workers may help Canada retain some of its own talent that leaks to the U.S. but, more interestingly, Canada is preparing “a clear offering” for people in the tech sector who would have otherwise been eligible for an H-1B visa. China has already launched a new “K Visa” to attract global STEM talent. India should surely be thinking about something similar. My guess is that this uncertainty around H-1B sponsorship is going to affect not just average IT workers, but talented Masters or PhD graduates, research scientists, who are in short supply globally. 

The message this sends to the world’s brightest students is that the United States does not offer a reliable pathway to success. Only those who see a legitimate H-1B pathway will gamble on an American education, meaning the country will attract fewer of the exceptional minds who have historically powered Silicon Valley’s vibrant startup ecosystem.

I spent 15 years building the technologies of the future in Silicon Valley on an H-1B visa, first at AMD, then at Google. I can say with confidence that I would never have gotten my first U.S. job under today’s fee structure. Under today’s policies, I would have migrated to another country or returned to India.  

The H-1B program is not without its faults and a smart update is always welcome, but America’s technology dominance wasn’t built by walls. It was built by bridges to attract the brightest minds. As policymakers navigate the future of H-1B visas to make it better, I hope they remember that in a global economy, talent is mobile, and as a VC, our capital follows talent. Countries that welcome it will thrive; those that don’t will be left behind.

The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.

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H-1B签证 人才引进 创新 硅谷 移民政策 科技人才 美国经济 H-1B visa Talent Attraction Innovation Silicon Valley Immigration Policy Tech Talent US Economy
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