IT Cos Face a Blow Due to Subcontracting and Denial of U.S. Visas

By siliconindia   |   Wednesday, 29 August 2012, 00:39 IST   |    1 Comments
35
cmt right
26
Comment Right
65
cmt right
11
cmt right
Printer Print Email Email

The approval of L1 visas has been very less. In 2011, approval for L1 visas were 28 percent lower, according to the National Foundation of American Policy. Visas approval on the other hand rose to 15 percent of applicants from other countries. More than 25,000 of Indians travel to U.S. every year for work purpose and the work permit is usually under the L1 visa category. In India, some software professionals see this as a discrimination against them.

Software industry grouping Nasscom said that it is working with the Indian and the U.S. authorities regarding the rising rejection of visas. “While some part of the work gets contracted, some IT firms are now focusing on hiring locals for domain-specific work in the U.S.,” said Ameet Nivsarkar, vice-president of Nasscom to The Economic Times.

In mid-2010, when the U.S. had increased the fees for visas, Nasscom had estimated an additional cost burden on the IT companies in India to 250 million dollars.