Rep. Patrick Kennedy

Rep. Patrick Kennedy

Posted: April 1, 2008 12:12 AM

Bring on the Best and the Brightest

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Over the course of our country's history, foreign-born innovators have made enormous contributions to our national prosperity. That much is indisputable. Companies like Google, Intel, Yahoo!, Sun Microsystems, and eBay have been founded by foreign-born entrepreneurs. As the global competition for talent grows more intense, we should take care to ensure that our immigration policies allow these kinds of contributions to continue. We need these people innovating, researching, opening businesses, and creating jobs here in the United States, rather than in China or India.

For that reason, Representative Michael McCaul and I recently introduced the New American Innovators Act. Our legislation is very simple: it would exempt anyone receiving a Ph.D. from an American university from numerical immigration limits. Under our bill, these talented individuals would no longer have to wait for years on end before qualifying for a green card.

We understand that the New American Innovators Act is not a comprehensive solution to the problems plaguing our high-skill immigration system. However, we do feel that our bill, and others like it, can help to illuminate the most compelling reasons for opening our borders to the most talented, highly educated individuals in the world, regardless of their country of origin.

Too often, discussions regarding our high-skill immigration policy get bogged down in a debate over the relative quality of the American workforce. I am not diminishing the importance of that debate; in fact, it is critical to our national future. But its outcome should not be the sole determinant of our high-skill immigration policy.

Well-known Stanford economist Paul Romer has discussed a "prospector theory" of high-skill immigration. As Mr. Romer describes it, "the more people you have prospecting, the more you will be stumbling on rich veins of gold."

American universities regularly graduate American students of the highest quality, and our economy has reaped the benefits for decades. But American universities also produce foreign graduates of equally high quality. Our economy has benefited from their talents as well. In fact, between 1995 and 2005 one quarter of all start-up engineering and technology firms in the United States had at least one foreign-born founder. By 2005, these companies produced $52 billion in sales and employed 450,000 workers.

The individuals we are targeting with our legislation are the best of the best. A Ph.D. from an American university is the gold standard in higher education. These individuals are not going to take jobs from Americans, they are going to create jobs for Americans, as foreign-born innovators have done for years. How much poorer would we be as a country if people like Andy Grove, who received a Ph.D. in chemical engineering and whose vision and talent made Intel the company that it is today, had been forced to leave the country upon completing their studies?

There is yet another reason we should be doing everything we can to keep these students in the United States: the American people subsidized their educations. Many of the foreign-born graduates of our schools studied at universities which receive significant public funding.

The fact is that we've invested a lot of resources over the years into building a higher education system that is the envy of the entire world, and because it is the envy of the entire world it attracts the best and the brightest students from around the world. That being the case, we should want to make it as easy as possible for those students who come out the other side of our higher education system with the most skills to stay. We should want them to become Americans.

In fact, it is a great testament to the singular level of opportunity available in the United States that so many of these foreign-born innovators have navigated our byzantine immigration system so that they can stay. But we cannot expect them to continue doing so indefinitely.

Unfortunately, our current immigration system practically begs them to go to our global economic competitors. It's like Microsoft spending years training a young employee, bringing them along at great effort and expense and then, just when that employee is ready to start paying dividends to the company, forcing them out the door to work for their competitor. That approach wouldn't make sense in the business world, and it doesn't work as national policy either.

We currently have the most talented workforce in the world, but we need to make sure that our education and immigration systems are working in concert to maintain and expand on that advantage. Passing the New American Innovators Act would mean more jobs, higher economic growth, and a better standard of living for all Americans.

 
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- Herrington I'm a Fan of Herrington 90 fans permalink
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As a person, well no, one of the people who helped build the computer industry in Silicon Valley 1979-99, and has been displaced by H1-B visa holders, I feel you should consider the impact of this proposal on other than shortsighted CEOs.

American engineering schools are closing because of lack of demand. The demand has fallen off because the degree is worth less than a journeyman carpenter's certification. Engineers we may needed, and the only way they are going to be had is either to exclusively import them or not import them. In any case it is probably too late. America has flushed the science and engineering leadership it once enjoyed for a few quarters of corporate profit "growth".

Paying engineers poorly insures poor engineering. Microsoft is so glaringly inefficient and has such an abysmal record for innovation that it should be a warning instead of a model for how to do business. Microsoft was at the forefront of lobbying for expanding the technology visa program and it has has so killed the prospects for engineers in this country that fewer than 35% of current engineers would recommend their profession to their children. And yet we still here this tripe about how important education and training are to Americans success in a global market. Pay the salaries and they will come, otherwise, live with it and don't bother us with a political agenda to make things worse.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 AM on 04/01/2008
- Liberal2 I'm a Fan of Liberal2 39 fans permalink

Obviously your drinking days have left you as addled as Bush1/2. Other countries now recognize the value of intellectual capital. All those brillant foreigners are equally courted by their own countries. And American innovators are also being courted by other countries. CEOs who actually add nothing to their bottom line suck all the available salary monies out of American companies.

The caliber of foreign minds you are talking about realize American corporations see only ten years of value in their personnel; then it's "bye, what have you done for me lately....­Next!"

The biggest loss of valuable talent is the American worker. Try making sure we're not the first sacrificed to bring in a foreign worker whose real value is accepting half the wages of the American employee.

Also consider the fact other countries offer their citizens quality educations that don't bankrupt them in the process.

You have a long way to go before lecturing others on "immigration policy".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:03 AM on 04/01/2008
- Lon I'm a Fan of Lon 18 fans permalink

This is a puzzling comment. If we are talking about valuable talent that is being courted by countries around the world, then why would they bring the labor market down.

The first part of your comments seems to undercut the rest of it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:12 AM on 04/01/2008

Great idea. But why restrict it to PhDs earned in the US?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:51 AM on 04/01/2008
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