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by tsotha 4015 days ago
The H-1B visa should be eliminated. It's been nothing but a scam from the start. If there's a demand for a certain type of skill high wages will attract people to the field.
1 comments

High wages are not enough. It takes time to train people. It can take years. Demand for experienced workers can't be satisfied with newly trained workers. Demand for skilled workers can very easily exceed their supply.

A good example of this problem currently is nurses in the Bay Area. They are very well paid however there is still a shortage because there isn't enough teaching available. The teachers are of course experienced nurses, so there's no way to increase the supply of teachers without further reducing the supply of nurses.

So while supply and demand will solve them problem eventually, you might have to wait 20 years and in the world of business someone else is going to eat your lunch during that time.

Twenty years? No way. Maybe five or ten years for something like nursing.

Programmers can learn a language in a few months and become professionally proficient in two years or so. It's a lot closer to factory work than rocket science.

Beyond that there are a bunch of 50+ year old guys with perfectly good skills who can't get jobs because they don't fit the common (erroneous) mental picture of a software developer. There's no shortage of IT people in the US and never has been.

I'm not sure I would agree with you that programming is closer to factory work than rocket science. If programming were closer to factory work, Disney would have outsourced it 10-15 years ago to China. :)
Companies large and small have been outsourcing development work for decades.
You mean, like IBM has done with India.
Very well paid is relative, especially when you factor in the cost of living somewhere like the Bay Area. I personally know several experienced nurses who would happily move if it meant increasing their overall standard of living.

It's always about salary. The shortage of nurses could be easily filled if they were raised. Instead hospitals prefer to cut it close, running borderline unsafe units on busy days

This is a fair point, one of the strongest arguments to be made for very specific work visas.

The problem, then, is how to allocate those visas without suppressing the market signals that would, long term, bring pay into balance.

All kinds of differences of opinion on this one from reasonably people. I tend to take a very suspicious view point on government intervention to control prices. I look at high level tech jobs, and to me, it looks like they generally require majoring in the hardest undergraduate subjects, and often (sometimes preferred, sometimes required) require gaining admission to top programs with high standardized test scores and GPAs, and finishing grad programs with much higher attrition rates than elite med, law, or business schools (UCSF's medical school attrition rate is below 0.5%, whereas top PhD programs often have attrition rates of 50%. MS programs are harder to find data on - all I could get was aggregate (rather than elite) and it was behind a pay wall, but I believe it was 25-30%).

Although an MS is shorter than a med degree, and a PhD is about the same amount of time (considering residency), keep in mind, we're also talking about a "shortage", so I think it's reasonable to take a generous view of what compensation should be. I'd say people with grad degrees in math heavy STEM fields - even MS degrees, should probably be on a par in terms of salary and career stability with medical specialties before we should be talking too seriously about a "shortage" that wouldn't simply be explained by uncompetitive wages and working conditions. So overall, if it's relatively straightforward to earn over $300k a year with a grad degree from a top 20 engineering school, then I'd be more open to the notion of a "shortage". Otherwise, I'd say that people are just making economically rational decisions to stay out of STEM jobs, considering the skill and academic ability required to get grad degrees in this field.

I know that would cause sticker shock, but I'd say that if the average mid-career industry salary is much below 300k for these degree holders (to say nothing of job stability), I have trouble believing it isn't a crutch to avoid competing for workers who can participate freely in labor markets.