Openers
Dear
Readers:
We
trust the New Year’s holiday was joyous for you and despite the uncertainty in
the world, there is much for which to be hopeful in 2004. This year we may see
serious immigration reform designed to address the seemingly perpetual issue of
massive illegal immigration in this country. President Bush seems committed to
finally designing a system that allows America’s employers to bring in foreign
workers readily when it is clear Americans are not available for the work.
America’s employers have been so desperate over the last 20 years that they
have been willing to risk serious financial penalties and even jail sentences in
order to find workers.
The
Lou Dobbses of the world pretend that market forces are not really important and
that employers could find enough workers if they simply paid a decent wage. That
sounds fine except that employers are in business to earn a profit and if they
cannot do so, they will cease operating. And in a global marketplace, employers
have to compete against overseas companies often able to produce goods and
services with much lower wages and overhead expenses than firms in America.
It
is, therefore, a difficult balancing act for the typical American employer. A
company must pay a high enough wage to attract workers while at the same time,
paying a low enough wage to keep the price of their products competitive with
firms in China, India and other nations where outsourcing has become a huge
industry. Employers who keep their operations in the US are condemned for hiring
foreign workers and not paying high enough salaries. Those that give up and
simply move operations overseas are condemned for betraying American workers.
There
must be a solution and immigration policy is certainly part of it. When
employers can be assured of having a stable and available work force in this
country willing to work at wage levels that ensure companies can compete with
goods and services produced abroad, then they will keep their operations in the
US. That means that Americans and immigrants will both have jobs available to
them. When a plant closes and its operations move overseas, both Americans and
immigrant workers lose their jobs – often permanently.
There
are, of course, other important solutions. Investing in the education of
Americans is vital. Outsourcing of work to immigrants and overseas operations
seems a lot less scary when Americans fill high end, high paying jobs requiring
considerable skills and training. And investing in technology needs to continue
in order to maximize productivity. The more American companies can produce per
hour on American soil for the same or lower costs, the less sense it may make to
move jobs overseas. Finally, we may need to make difficult decisions regarding
which industries it makes sense to support through government policies and which
ones should rightfully move overseas. Some industries – like food production -
may be important to keep here strictly for national security reasons even if
strict economic theory suggests that we should not. But we may decide that other
industries don’t produce the kinds of high paying jobs that should be a
priority for this country.
Obviously
this is a debate that will continue for years to come and I don’t pretend to
have the answers. But what is clear is that difficult choices will need to be
made and Americans may have to choose between instincts to protect workers and
industries and a desire to have an affordable cost of living with the “always
low prices” that have become the norm in our modern economy.
On
a separate note, we have to say “SHAME ON YOU!” to the State Department for
its utter failure in managing this year’s green card lottery application
process. An online lottery application should have been a simple procedure. But
complicated photo submission rules and an utterly negligent lack of server
capacity meant millions of applicants probably could not access the system. The
State Department did not even offer an apology when its system was basically
shut down during the lottery’s last two days. Instead, a spokesman said
applicants should have applied earlier. That’s like penalizing tax payers who
file on the last day. Of course, after more than fifteen years of running the
lottery, the State Department should have known that there is always a rush at
the end. Furthermore, people file on the last day because the law permits this
and it is not the government’s concern why a person times an application in a
certain way as long as the person complies with the law. A simple apology would
have gone a long way here. Instead, their handling of the mess only hardens
beliefs that our immigration officials are arrogant and incompetent.
Finally,
as always, we remind readers that we're lawyers who make our living representing
immigration clients and employers seeking to comply with immigration laws. We
would love to discuss becoming your law firm. Just go to http://www.visalaw.com/intake.html
to request an appointment or call us at 800-748-3819 or 901-682-6455.
Regards,
Greg Siskind
Disclaimer: This newsletter is provided as a public service and not intended to establish an attorney client relationship. Any reliance on information contained herein is taken at your own risk.