US immigration bill rattles Aussies

Via DNAIndia.com
06/19/2006

MELBOURNE: Australia’s problem of skill workers  shortage would take another blow if the US proposal to increase the migrant intake is implemented, experts have warned. Australian policy makers and experts have expressed  fears that the US would lure away the best of the skilled  workforce away from the South Pacific country.

The US Senate has recently passed a Bill to increase annual employment-based migration from 140,000 to a whopping 650,000. If the proposals are approved by the US lower house, the maximum limit on the high-skilled H1-B working visas would jump from 65,000 a year to 115,000. This would  direct skilled migrants’ movement away from countries  like Australia.

The booming Australian economy is feeling the skills crunch as the insatiable Chinese demand for its resources  is not showing any sign of petering out in the near  future. Indian demand for Australian resources is also on  the rise and would ensure the Australian economic  prosperity for years to come. The Senate Bill to increase the migrant intake reportedly  also includes proposal to allow international students in  the US to be given work and residency rights after they  complete their studies. 

These proposals have alarmed Bob Birrell, Director of  the Centre for Population and Urban Research at Monash  University here.

“There’s already significant competition for skilled migrants, especially persons who have work experience in skills relevant to an advanced economy like that of Australia or the United States,” Dr Birrell told The Age newspaper recently. “There’s already a problem and if the US upped its level to 600,000, then it would make it considerably more difficult,” he said.    The Age newspaper has also quoted an American expert in stressing the point that Australian and the US skill  shortage is bound to come worse as the traditional  sources of skilled migrants like India are also keeping  their brightest at home.

“The situation in India has radically changed. It is no longer a must that to be successful you have to leave India,” the American expert was quoted as saying.


 
Trackbacks
  • No trackbacks exist for this post.
Comments
  • No comments exist for this post.
Leave a comment

Submitted comments are subject to moderation before being displayed.

 Name

 Email (will not be published)

 Website

Your comment is 0 characters limited to 3000 characters.