THE GULF BETWEEN WHAT GANDHI PREACHED TO WESTERN WORLD & THE
ETHICS OF IT INDIANS IN USA
The hypocrisy of India and Indians has been exposed to Americans as an aftermath of H-1B Visa Scandals in the US. Americans are beginning to learn that Indians take short cuts to beat the American system. If one qualified Gujarati IT person comes to Silicon Valley Company, rest assorted, hordes of Visa scammers would follow. US Justice Department has wised up to these scammers and US Consulate in Mumbai has become quite savvy in identifying an IT scam.
Jack Tapper has written a detailed article on Indian H-1B Scammers reproduced below:
James Tapper January2, 2014 02:03
The Indian tech worker H-1B visa scam
More than 1 in 3 US tech jobs go to foreigners. Americans, and many foreigners, get cheated in the process. Obama and Zuckerberg want to let in more.
Indian tech workers stroll through the Infosys compound in Bangalore. Indian outsourcing firms are the biggest recipients of the US government’s H1-B visas, initially intended for highly skilled workers, but increasingly used to hire lower-cost programmers. (Dibyangshu Sarkar/AFP/Getty Images)ENLARGE
NEW DELHI, India — When news about an American company hiring Americans gets widespread coverage in India, there’s clearly something unusual going on.
So why would Indian newspapers, TV stations and financial websites be interested — arguably more interested than most US media — in the announcement by New Jersey-based IT firm Cognizant Technology Solutions that it will create 10,000 new American jobs?
The short answer is that most of Cognizant’s 166,400 staff is based in India. Only 29,000 work in the US, mostly at the firm’s headquarters in Teaneck, NJ.
Cognizant is a major player in the global outsourcing industry, and India is the world’s outsourcing hub. But most of its revenues come from the US.
In its most recent quarter, the company reported earning $1.78 billion in the US, boosted by “Obamacare.” Insurers and states hired Cognizant to help code online insurance exchanges.
For many Indian techies, working for a company like Cognizant is a chance for a US transfer and a slice of the American dream.
And those 10,000 new American jobs that got so much Indian media attention may mean 10,000 fewer jobs for them.
Outsourcing giants
The US Congress created the H-1B visa program to enable American companies to hire foreigners with exceptional skills. Instead, critics say, it is increasingly being used to find workers willing to accept lower salaries. The program allows up to 65,000 high-skilled foreign workers to work in the US for up to three years. Competition is intense: The visas are handed out on a first come, first served basis and it took just four days for the 2014 quota to be filled after it opened on April 1, 2013.
Most come from India — 64 percent of last year’s applicants, according to the White House. Four Indian firms — Cognizant, Infosys, Tata Consultancy Services and Wipro — brought more than 26,000 Indians to work in the US in 2012 under the H-1B visa scheme, according to research by Professor Ron Hira, of the Rochester Institute of Technology.
Getting an H-1B visa has become a major career step for many IT graduates, and a major source of profit for the outsourcers.
For Indian workers, a job in the US means opportunities and money. For the outsourcing firms, the Indian IT workers are significantly cheaper than their American counterparts — by about 25 percent.
Tech companies have been lobbying to increase the cap — Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg set up pressure group FWD.us to campaign on immigration issues. Microsoft founder Bill Gates has been a long-time advocate of making it easier for foreign-born high-skilled workers to immigrate.
“Since these [outsourcing] companies depend on the program so heavily they flood in applications,” Professor Hira told GlobalPost.
“The firms ‘bank’ visas — keep people back in India on the bench and then utilize them when needed. Also, they rotate workers in the US to ensure they don’t establish roots, and rotate them back and forth to India. These firms are growing so fast that they need a bank of visas to meet any new growth.”
Scammers abound
In the face of such intense competition, companies have been tempted to break the rules.
In October, Infosys paid a $34 million settlement to the Federal Government — a record for an immigration case — over allegations of “systematic visa fraud and abuse of immigration processes.”
Unable to get its cheaper Indian employees to the US to work on short-term contracts, Infosys used a different visa — the B-1, normally given to foreign businessmen who need to travel to the US to complete deals.
According to an official from the Department of State’s Diplomatic Security Service, special agents spent two and a half years examining the records of 6,500 foreign Infosys employees on B-1 visas.