
Critics of the Hโ1B visa for skilled foreign workers often claim that the status amounts to โindenturedโ servitude. Indentured servitudeย is aโฏcontractย to work for a single employer for aย predetermined period without pay. Hโ1B workers are not only compensated wellโthey receive wages inย the top 10 percentย of wage earners in the United States. As importantly, although they face more obstacles to changing jobs than US citizens, Hโ1B workers are not tied to a single employer and change jobs regularly.
In fact, tens of thousands of Hโ1B workers leave their original Hโ1B employers every year. Figure 1 shows the number of Hโ1B workers switching to new employers by fiscal year. Between fiscal year 2005 and 2024, Hโ1B workers changed jobs over one million times (1,115,069). The number of switches grew from about 24,000ย in 2005 to aย record 123,888ย in 2022โa more than fivefold increase. The number of approved Hโ1B petitions for a change of employer has fallen in the past two years, plummeting to just 63,865ย in 2024.
On another note, Hโ1B job switching is more common than Hโ1B workers starting Hโ1B employment for the first time. In 2024, only one in three of all Hโ1B workers starting with a new employer were existing Hโ1B workers recruited from other US employers (Figure 2). This suggests that US employers are more likely to hire an Hโ1B worker already in the country with Hโ1B status than to hire a new Hโ1B worker who does not yet have Hโ1B status.
The jump in switching in 2021 is likely attributable to the record number of green card applications filed that year. After 180ย days, Hโ1B workers who have filed aย green card application may change jobs without the employer being forced to restart the green card process, easing the job-switching process. The decline in green card applications since 2022 has meant fewer Hโ1B workers are able to change jobs, highlighting the challenges that Hโ1B workers still face when changing jobs.
Among other issues, new Hโ1B employers have to pay hefty fees to poach them, and the shortage of green cards for Indian workers can wrongly make those workers feel that they have to stick with their existing employer to complete the process. The best solution would be to make the conversion to aย green card automatic rather than requiring aย renewal after three years. The sixty-day grace period to find a new job is still not long enough to give some workers the confidence to simply quit a problematic job without already having a new one lined up.
Despite these government-imposed obstacles, the widespread practice of Hโ1B job-shifting further refutes the claim that Hโ1B workers are โindenturedโ servants. The fact is that the government has unfairly tilted the playing field against Hโ1B workers by erecting artificial barriers to job changes, but options exist to find better employment within the Hโ1B system. The government should expand these options rather than try to reduce or eliminate workers who contribute significantly to the fields of science, technology, engineering, math, and medicine.
Note: This post is an update of anย April 2024 blog postย on the same subject using more upโโtoโโdate numbers.ย




