Business Canada plans brain drain of H-1B visa holders, with no-job, no-worries work permits - Thank you Canada! Feel free to take all of our "skilled" tech talent

They're vetted, almost acculturated, and will be booted from the US if they lose their gig​

Simon Sharwood
Wed 28 Jun 2023 // 02:44 UTC

Canada has launched a bid to attract techies working in the USA on the notorious H-1B visa, by offering them the chance to move north.

The offer, announced on Wednesday as part of the nation's first ever tech talent strategy, means H-1B visa holders can move to Canada without having a job waiting for them.

The H-1B visa is contentious in the USA. Its purpose is to attract skilled people whose talents are in short supply stateside, thus adding flexibility to the economy, but the visa is believed to be widely abused – by employers who use it to find employees willing to work for less than their American peers.

But the visa is vey popular in India – one of the main sources of H-1B applicants. Indeed it's so popular that the Biden Administration last week announced moderate reforms to the program during the state visit by Indian prime minster Narendra Modi.

The H-1B also made news early in 2023 amid mass layoffs in the tech sector, because visa holders who don't have jobs have just 90 days to leave the Land of the Free.

Canada has clearly spotted an opportunity to nab some talent that needs a bolt-hole – and can get that talent safe in the knowledge that its southern neighbor has vetted H-1B holders, and they already have some experience of working in North America.

Canada has created 10,000 places for H-1B holders, which must be filled within a year as of July 16. The work permits issued under the program last three years.

The talent acquisition plan also includes:
  • STEM-specific categories for the Express Enty program targeting skilled workers;
  • Promotions to attract digital nomads;
  • Visas that make it easier for workers to move to Canada to work at startups other than their own companies;
  • The development of an "Innovation Stream" offering five-year work permits for those with skills in certain occupations, or who will work for businesses contributing the Canada's industrial innovation goals.
The Great White North is also keen on growing more local talent.

Skilled people – especially techies – are in short supply everywhere. Canada's revamped talent acquisition program is therefore not unusual, but is doubtless designed with the hope of giving it an edge.

One audience the strategy doesn't explicitly address is Russians. Hundreds of thousands of skilled techies are thought to have fled Russia – either to avoid conscription, or just to seek greener pastures in light of economic sanctions.

Source (Archive)
 
believed to be widely abused – by employers who use it to find employees willing to work for less than their American peers.
i think it is funny that it took people this long to realize that is what this is for. it really serves no other use than to drive down wages in high paying tech sectors.
safe in the knowledge that its southern neighbor has vetted H-1B holders
lol, lmao even.
 
i think it is funny that it took people this long to realize that is what this is for. it really serves no other use than to drive down wages in high paying tech sectors.

lol, lmao even.
Not just tech, every sector, tech, construction, farming, prepare for the quality of life to drop thru the floor. Mexicans bring more Mexicans, that's just the rule
 
I dunno, I can see a lot of pajeets taking the bait only to realize that India is a more civilized country.

In general the whole third world brain drain western countries engage in always sounded so hypocritical to me. The same people who moralize about how you need to conserve and reserve other cultures are the same pushing to deprive those countries of their most important asset.
 
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