Of the 65,000 H-1B visas issued by the US Citizenship and Immigration Services annually, 11,000 were lying vacant at the end of 2010, for want of applications, as opposed to peak seasons when the cap would be reached within hours of them being issued.
The US economy, still grappling with recession, protectionist measures aimed at outsourcing and the Indian information technology industry that is increasingly inclined towards becoming global, appear to have created a casualty out of H-1B visas.
"As opposed to peak times from 2002-2005, when the H-1B applications would be get filled within a matter of hours, there is a downward slide in demand," said Ameet Nivsarkar, vice-president, global trade and development, National Association of Software and Services Companies.
H-1B is a non-immigrant US visa that allows employers in the US to temporarily employ foreigners specialty occupations.
The visa itself is understood to be primarily utilised by Indian IT companies for onsite project delivery.
"There is, at present, a trend to hire locals in the US for onsite work. Contributing factors include the still absent vibrancy in the US economy, which means there is an availability of cheap local talent," Nivsarkar said.
There is also the factor of mounting protectionism, which has translated into prices for H-1B being hiked from $320 to $2,320 by the Border Security Bill.
Interestingly, even in 2009, with recession was at its peak, the cap for H-1B reached in December.
Industry moguls while supporting the idea of an increasingly global Indian IT industry with a clear focus on local hiring assert that the hike in visa fees is not the deciding factor behind a fall in H-1B demand.
"The increase in visa fees is not large enough for us to fundamentally alter hiring policies, but a sign of the overall maturity in the industry
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