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    Home / News / World News / Good news for Indians: US introduces 15-day H-1B visa processing
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    Good news for Indians: US introduces 15-day H-1B visa processing

    Good news for Indians: US introduces 15-day H-1B visa processing

    By Shiladitya Ray
    Feb 19, 2019
    12:48 pm

    What's the story

    In what comes as good news for Indian professionals seeking to work in the US, the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), announced last week that it will resume premium processing for all H-1B visa applications filed on or before December 21, 2018, starting Tuesday.

    The option had earlier been suspended, but the resumption of it allows for faster processing of applications.

    Here's more.

    Premium processing

    Why the premium processing option will come as a relief

    For those unaware, the premium processing service provides accelerated 15-calendar day processing for certain employment-based visa applications for an additional fee of $1,410, which was hiked by 15% last year.

    Although this fee is over and above all other filing fees, many are expected to opt for it, considering that the normal processing time for H-1B visas currently stands at a whopping 5.2 months.

    Effect

    Indian workers and Indian IT firms are likely to benefit

    Now that the USCIS has resumed the premium processing service, Indians are highly likely to benefit from it, considering the fact that 60% of annual H-1B allotments typically go to Indian workers.

    The biggest beneficiary is the Indian IT services sector, as both Indian tech firms and American tech firms have to take the H-1B visa route to hire highly-skilled foreign workers - primarily Indians and Chinese workers.

    Local hiring

    However, Indian firms will also have to hire locally

    While this move will come as a relief for Indian workers and Indian firms, it does not signal any change in the Trump administration's policy requiring Indian firms to hire more US workers.

    Complying with the same, Indian IT players such as Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), Infosys, Wipro, and HCL Technologies have already stepped up local hiring in the US.

    Other changes

    The move comes on the back of other changes

    Notably, the move also comes on the back of earlier changes proposed in the H-1B lottery system - changes that are also expected to benefit Indians.

    The new rules, which come into effect on April 1, 2019, not only requires H-1B applicants to electronically pre-register with the USCIS for the annual visa lottery, but also allows the USCIS to reverse the lottery order.

    Information

    A brief overview of the H-1B lottery process

    Annually, the US awards 65,000 H-1B visas, and an additional 20,000 visas are awarded to advanced degree-holders educated in the US. Since the number of applicants far exceed the annual H-1B quota, the USCIS allots H-1B visas through a random lottery process.

    Order

    The new H-1B lottery order

    Under the current lottery process, the USCIS randomly selects 20,000 applicants from a pool of US advanced degree holders, then puts remaining applications in the larger pool, and randomly selects 65,000 applicants.

    However, under the new process, all applicants would first be put in the same pool, and 65,000 applicants would be randomly selected. Then, all unselected US advanced degree-holders would be put into the pool reserved for them, and 20,000 applicants would be selected.

    Effect

    What the changes mean for H-1B applicants

    According to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), the new process would lead to an increase of 16% in the number of selected H-1B beneficiaries who hold a master's degree or more advanced degrees from an educational institute in the US.

    However, according to USCIS estimates, the changes would result in a 3% increase in the number of H-1B visas going to such applicants.

    Data

    US-educated Indians could significantly benefit from the changes

    Given the fact that currently 95,651 Indians are pursuing advanced degrees in the US, and 75,390 Indians are engaged in practical training after graduation, the preference of US advanced degree holders could significantly benefit US-educated Indians.

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