Re: entreprenuers
ProfR
10/17/2011 3:35:46 PM
I like the idea of making it easier for college grads to stay in the US. Today the US is behind other countries in terms of science and engineering. So this would help fill a gap.
I think the big issue here is having a reasonable policy. Today we seem to have a patchwork policy with no particular goals like filling the science gap.
In college, I knew an engineering student who was in the US because of the tremendous foresight her Chinese grandparent's had decades earlier. They saw that the US immigration quotas from Central American countries were much more open than from China or other parts of Asia. So they left China for Central America. They learned Spanish and raised their children in Honduras.
This was the first step of a plan that, many years later, would allow their Grandchildren to reach the ultimate destination - the USA. My frriend benefited from two generations of planning - fluent in Madarin, Spanish, and English; she was in graduate school in the states.
Right now it can be incredibly difficult to become a legal immigrant to the US, and fairly easy to be an illegal immigrant. We seem to have this backwards.
Re: entreprenuers
driven
10/17/2011 2:41:30 PM
Thomas Friedman wrote a piece on this in the NYT a while back. Here's the part I liked best:
Good-paying jobs don’t come from bailouts. They come from start-ups. And where do start-ups come from? They come from smart, creative, inspired risk-takers. How do we get more of those? There are only two ways: grow more by improving our schools or import more by recruiting talented immigrants. Surely, we need to do both, and we need to start by breaking the deadlock in Congress over immigration, so we can develop a much more strategic approach to attracting more of the world’s creative risk-takers. “Roughly 25 percent of successful high-tech start-ups over the last decade were founded or co-founded by immigrants,” said Litan. Think Sergey Brin, the Russian-born co-founder of Google, or Vinod Khosla, the India-born co-founder of Sun Microsystems.
That is no surprise. After all, Craig Mundie, the chief research and strategy officer of Microsoft, asks: What made America this incredible engine of prosperity? It was immigration, plus free markets. Because we were so open to immigration — and immigrants are by definition high-aspiring risk-takers, ready to leave their native lands in search of greater opportunities — “we as a country accumulated a disproportionate share of the world’s high-I.Q. risk-takers.”
entreprenuers
Tenacious
10/17/2011 2:36:29 PM
I think we'd benefit from an immigration policy that encouraged entreprenuers. The most logical options I've heard:
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Grant permanent residency, and an easier path to US citizenship, to immigrants who graduate from qualified US colleges and universities, especially those with degrees in mathematics, engineering, or the sciences.
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Eliminate annual caps on H1-B visas. We should give highly-educated workers the right to work within the US as long as they pass security checks.
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