It appears there is hard
evidence to prove that employers are using the H-1B visa
program to hire cheap labor; that is,
to pay lower wages than the national average for
programming jobs.
According to “The Bottom of
the Pay Scale: Wages for H-1B Computer Programmers — F.Y.
2004,” a report by Programmers Guild board member John Miano,
non-U.S. citizens working in the United States on an H-1B visa
are paid “significantly less than their American
counterparts.” How much less? “On average, applications for
H-1B workers in computer occupations were for wages $13,000
less than Americans in the same occupation and state.”
Miano based his report on OES
(Occupational Employment Statistics) data from the
Bureau of Labor Statistics which estimates wages for the
entire country by state and metropolitan area. The report’s
H-1B wage data came from the U.S. Department of Labor’s H-1B
disclosure
Web site.
Miano went out of his way to
be balanced, and whenever possible he gave the benefit of the
doubt to the employer. For example, he used OES data from 2003
because this is the wage information that would have been
available to the employers when filing an LCA (labor condition
application).
Miano had some difficulty
matching OES job codes with LCA job titles, which employers
typically create. Where both the OES and the LCA listed a job
as “programmer/analyst,” Miano took the conservative approach
of assuming that the LCA was describing a programmer, a job
title that typically earns a lower wage than a systems
analyst.
Nonetheless, Miano’s report
shows that wages paid to H-1B workers in computer programming
occupations had a mean salary of $52,312, while the OES mean
was $67,700; a difference of $15,388. The report also lists
the OES median salary as $65,003, or $12,691 higher than the
H-1B median.
When you look at computer job
titles by state, California has one of the biggest
differentials between OES salaries and H-1B salaries. The
average salary for a programmer in California is $73,960,
according to the OES. The average salary paid to an H-1B visa
worker for the same job is $53,387; a difference of $20,573.
Here are some other
interesting national wage comparisons: The mean salary of an
H-1B computer scientist is $78,169, versus $90,146 according
to the OES. For an H-1B network analyst, the mean salary is
$55,358, versus the OES mean salary of $64,799. And for the
title “system administrator,” there was a $17,478 difference
in salary between the H-1B mean and the OES mean.
H-1B visa workers were also
concentrated at the bottom end of the wage scale, with the
majority of H-1B visa workers in the 10-24 percentile range.
“That means the largest concentration of H-1B workers make
less than [the] highest 75 percent of the U.S. wage earners,”
the report notes.
While it would be difficult to
prove that any one particular employer is hiring foreign
workers to pay less, the statistics show us that, for whatever
reason, this is exactly what is happening on a nationwide
basis. Miano says lobbyists will admit that a small number of
companies are abusing the H-1B program, but what he has found
in this research is that almost everyone is abusing it.
“Abuse is by far more common
than legitimate use,” he says.
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