EB2 India Retrogression - Why We Need Immigration Reform Now |
In the October 2022 Visa Bulletin, the Dates of Filing Chart shows that EB2 India will retrogress well over 2 years to May 1, 2012. A 10-year wait for a green card for persons with advanced degrees? Yes, but this is for Indian professionals who were sponsored by their employers over 10 years ago. How about people sponsored for EB2 India green cards in 2022? Believe it or not, the wait may be over 100 years! In other words, most EB2 India professionals will not work long enough, or even live long enough, to get green cards. They will be forced to extend their H-1B status every 3 years until they retire and then have to leave the U.S. Why is this? Due to our outdated immigration laws, only 28.6% of the 140,000 employment-based green cards are available to professionals with advanced degrees annually. And the law limits the percentage of EB2 green cards which can be given to persons born in a particular country to 7% of the total. Even worse, since spouses and children of the principal EB2 India applicant are counted toward the numerical limit, the number of advanced-degreed professionals from India who can get green cards each year is dramatically reduced. Fortunately, because most countries do not use all of their EB1 and EB2 green cards, some of the unused green cards are given to Indians who have been waiting in line for many years. During the pandemic, because the number of family-based immigrants was very low due to US Embassy closings, the number of EB green cards available worldwide more than doubled to 281,000. However, during the coming fiscal year which begins on October 1, 2022, this number is expected to decrease substantially. |
EB2 India Backlogs Currently, there are over 1,400,000 people waiting in line for EB green cards, over 10 times the annual quota. What percentage of these people are from India? Over 80%. Why is this? Because India is a huge country with a population of almost 1.4 billion many of whom are highly educated, and US employers, especially in high-tech, are dependent on their labor. Does it make any sense to limit the number of EB2 India immigrants to 7% of the total number of immigrants with advanced degrees, the same as countries like Ireland and Costa Rica which have populations of around 5 million? Consider that for people with advanced degrees from any country in the world except India and China, there are no waiting lines to get green cards. So why should EB2 India professionals already working for U.S. employers be penalized simply because of their country of birth? And there is another huge problem for these Indian immigrants and their families. |
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Disclaimer: This newsletter is not intended to establish an attorney-client relationship. All information contained in this newsletter is generalized. Any reliance on information contained herein is taken at your own risk. All content Copyright Carl Shusterman 1995-2022, All rights reserved |
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