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by codebyaditya 169 days ago
Spot on. That 15+ year backlog turns a 'temporary' visa into a long-term economic trap. Our data actually showed the wage gap widens the longer a worker stays on H-1B (rather than converging with citizen wages), precisely because they are locked out of the free market (EAD) for the prime earning years of their career.
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It's kind of an aside, but it also prevents the individual from doing the most economically efficient thing. I mean, suppose an H1B worker wanted to start a startup and hire some Americans to work for their company. They're legally not allowed to do that and create those jobs. Technically they need a business visa, but how would they get one if they can't start the business in the first place?
Exactly. We call this the 'Innovation Tax.' By legally tying workers to a single employer, the system prevents them from becoming employers themselves.

Our data showed 62% of H-1B filings use generic job titles like 'Analyst'—suggesting that even highly specialized founders are forced into 'cogs in the machine' roles. This isn't just a wage loss for the worker; it's a job-creation loss for the U.S. economy. No taking any side, but based on real data analysis quoting this.

> Our data actually showed the wage gap widens the longer a worker stays on H-1B

Isn't this because the majority of Indians on H-1Bs work for staffing companies?

The data shows it’s a structural feedback loop. Even comparing identical job titles in the same city, the $50k gap persists. The gap widens because citizen workers can leave staffing firms for raises at any time, while H-1B holders face 'mobility friction' (60-day rule/backlogs) that keeps them locked into lower-paying tiers longer.