In 2014, Indian nationals accounted for less than 100 of I-526 filings. Last year, Indian nationals accounted for an estimated 500 or more I-526 petitions. What is driving demand?
H-1B VISA INSECURITY
Between 2007 and 2017, 64 percent of H-1B beneficiaries were citizens of India. The next closest country of origin, China, accounted for only 9 percent of the total. Estimates put the number of Indian nationals working in the U. S. on an H-1B visa, plus their dependents, at between 500,000 and 750,000 individuals. 1
The Trump administration’ s“ Buy American, Hire American” agenda has put pressure on H-1B holders from several directions. The rate of RFEs for January to August 2017 for H-1B applications increased 45 percent compared to the same period a year earlier.
Last October, USCIS advised its officers to“ apply the same level of scrutiny” to extension requests for the H-1B visa( among other visas), rescinding the previous guidance that gave deference in most cases to previously approved visas. In addition, USCIS called for increased scrutiny on H-1B cases involving third-party consulting assignments in its Feb. 22, 2018, policy memo, PM-602-0157.
Most ominously, the U. S. Department of Homeland Security is considering new regulations that would eliminate the AC21 benefit by which H-1B holders have been able to remain in the U. S. while waiting for their EB-2 or EB-3 green card. Although USCIS has recently reassured H-1B holders that they will not likely be deported based on the proposed regulations, USCIS’ Chief of Media Relations noted in a statement that extensions could be requested under the new regulations, but only in oneyear increments under section 106( a)-( b) of AC21.
EB-2 AND EB-3 BACKLOG
Indian nationals have long relied on the EB-2( advanced degree / exceptional ability) or the EB-3( skilled worker / professional) visa as their primary means for obtaining U. S. permanent residency.
The per-country limits of the EB-2 or EB-3 visas have resulted in wait times of nine to ten years for Indian nationals to be eligible to file for LPR status, according to the U. S. Department of State’ s Visa Bulletin. As discouraging as the DOS priority dates are to Indian EB-2 and EB-3 applicants, the situation, in fact, is considerably worse.
PRIORITY DATES
Priority dates for Indian EB-2 and EB-3 move slowly, and in some months, not at all, retrogressing several times. In fact, the July 2016 Visa Bulletin featured a massive four-year retrogression in EB-2 for India.
What’ s more, one analyst who took a close look at the likely inventory of EB-2-based I-485 applications calculated wait times in the neighborhood of 100 years. 2 As stated on GCReforms. org,“ There is [ currently ] little hope for a skilled employment based worker from India to get a green card in their lifetimes due to their per-country limits.”
Employment Based China- Mainland Born India
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SCHOOL-AGE CHILDREN
Between 2007 and 2017, 69 percent of H-1B filings were for workers ages 25 to 34. An additional 22 percent were ages 35 to 44. Inasmuch as these age groups encompass the prime childbearing years( the vast majority of Indian H-1B holders are married), a high percentage of Indian H-1B holders are residing in the U. S. with young children.
Many of these children were born in the U. S. and are already U. S. citizens. Most are in schools and have been deeply acculturated to the American way of life. India is a foreign country to most of them. One can easily imagine how keenly all members of these families wish to remain in the U. S.
INDIAN REAL ESTATE MARKET
Indian workers in the U. S. typically don’ t have $ 500,000 in liquid funds to invest in an EB-5 visa, not to mention the $ 1-million net worth or salary levels required to be qualified as an accredited investor under U. S. securities law.
Government data indicates that 84 percent of H-1B applicants will earn less than $ 125,000 per year in their first year of work in the U. S.
Some growth in annual salary is likely, of course, but even for two-earner families, the relatively short amount of time that the families have spent in the U. S. means that few families have sufficient savings to fund an EB-5 investment by themselves. Most of the balance comes from a gift financed by the sale or mortgaging of property owned by parents or other relatives of the U. S. resident worker or spouse.
Fortunately for these investors, real estate values in India have increased greatly in recent years. A combination of new residential and commercial uses for properties that had once been agricultural, improvements in infrastructure, increases in population growth, the current enthusiasm for real estate as an investment, plus the sheer length of time the properties have been held by older Indians, have all combined to raise property values 40- to 50-fold in the last 50 years. 3
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