Compete America

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Compete America is a coalition representing

immigration policy
for highly educated foreign-born professionals.

Compete America supports the idea that

researchers, and engineers will continue to be in demand and drive economic growth and job creation.[1]
Because of this, they argue that arbitrarily low visa quotas and massive backlogs in the system plague the employment- based visa process.

Compete America's legislative goals are:[1]

  • The end of arbitrary obstacles to employment and permanent residency for foreign-born master’s and Ph.D. graduates from U.S. universities
  • A streamlined
    green card
    process
  • A market-based
    H-1B
    visa cap

Principles

Compete America supports the following principles:[2]

  • The United States must grow domestic sources of talent, and our member organizations are committed to improving U.S. science, technology, engineering and mathematics (
    STEM
    ) education and encouraging more young Americans to choose careers in those fields.
  • U.S. employers must be able to recruit and retain foreign-born highly educated professionals – particularly after they graduate from a U.S. university – as an important complement to domestic sources of talent.
  • The U.S. employment-based visa system must be permanently fixed so that foreign-born talent can stay in the United States, innovating for America.
  • Brainpower is even more essential in a down economy, and future growth and job creation will be led by innovation, whether it’s new technologies, new cures or new sources of energy. America does not have a monopoly on brainpower, and in an increasingly competitive global environment, we have to retain the talent that will keep us leading worldwide innovation.
  • Strong, smart enforcement is needed, to protect American and foreign-national workers, and laws should punish bad actors and recognize that most employers who hire foreign professionals follow the rules scrupulously.
  • Immigration reform must safeguard the interests of American workers, while recognizing that excessive and protectionist measures that shut off access to foreign-national talent will only inhibit innovation, job growth and the resulting opportunities for American workers.

List of members

References

  1. ^ a b "Who We Are | CompeteAmerica". Archived from the original on 2010-08-06. Retrieved 2010-08-02.
  2. ^ "Compete America's 2010 Principles for Employment-based Visa Reform | CompeteAmerica". Archived from the original on 2010-08-06. Retrieved 2010-08-02.
  3. ^ "Members | CompeteAmerica". www.competeamerica.org. Archived from the original on 6 August 2010. Retrieved 22 May 2022.

External links