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In this week’s episode of Parsing Immigration Policy, Dr. Ron Hira, Associate Professor of Public Policy at Howard University, joins guest host Steve Camarota, the Center’s Director of Research, to discuss the flaws in the U.S. guest worker programs and the myths of a STEM labor shortage.

Hira refutes the idea that guest worker programs are justified under the assumption that there is a shortage of STEM workers. He states, “There is no evidence to support that there is a generalized shortage of STEM workers.” Both Hira and Camarota highlight that wages in STEM fields have been stagnant or declining, indicating no shortage.

The discussion then moves to the exploitation within guest worker programs. Hira explains, “Guest workers are underpaid, exploited, and threatened, which harms U.S. workers competing with them.”  He points out that the Department of Labor sets lower minimum wages for H-1B workers and that the OPT program makes foreign workers cheaper by exempting them from payroll taxes, distorting the labor market.

Hira concludes, “There is clarity on what should be done, the question is whether you get an executive branch that will do anything about it.”

Highlights:

Host

Steven Camarota is the Director of Research at the Center for Immigration Studies.

Guest

Dr. Ron Hira is an Associate Professor of Public Policy at Howard University.

Related

New evidence of widespread wage theft in the H-1B visa program

H1-B Visa Program: Myths and Needed Reforms

DOL Is Considering Allowing More Employers to Circumvent Protections for American Workers

Legal and Illegal Immigration: Understanding U.S. High-Skilled Immigration

Intro Montage

Voices in the opening montage: