国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

World / China-US

Silicon Valley can't forget to have a heart

By Chang Jun (chinadaily.com.cn) Updated: 2016-04-19 09:10

There is no scarcity of compelling stories about entrepreneurship in the Bay Area.

And behind legends, fame and fortunes, we need to recognize and acknowledge the contributions and sacrifices foreign-born tech professionals have made to make America strong.

Last week, I conducted an informal survey among my friends of Chinese and Indian heritage who work at leading tech companies.

One particular question I asked, purely out of curiosity, was: What is your dinner time? I've been led to understand that one of the perks Silicon Valley tech firms take great pride in providing their employees is free meals.

The feedback I got, however, only reminded me of the famous saying: "Capital comes dripping from head to foot, from every pore, with blood and dirt."

Here is a list of dinner times at a few unicorn or well-established firms: Employees at Facebook can start to eat at 5:45 pm; Airbnb at 6; Google at 6:30; Apple at 7; and Uber not until 8:15 pm.

Ride-sharing app Uber has dominated its industry since its inception in 2009 and was recently valued at $51 billion. But competition from home and abroad — Lyft and Curb in the US; Didi and Kuaidi in China; Grab in Malaysia and Ola in India — is fierce.

With some of those dinner times, I can't help but wonder how late those employees with families and young children will get home?

Probably no one would argue that a nation's overall competitiveness relies heavily on the quality and quantity of its most talented people. As a result, public and private sectors the world over vie with each other using tempting salary and benefit packages to identify and lure exceptional pros.

In the US, the technology sector in particular faces a severe talent shortage which obstructs its continuous development, according to a recent Gartner report.

The White House said there were more than half a million IT job openings to date, a rapidly increasing demand for techies who are able to design, develop and deliver solutions rapidly and repeatedly.

By 2020, there will be 1.4 million computer engineering job openings, according to the US Department of Labor. And American universities and colleges are unlikely to graduate enough qualified students to fill even 30 percent of those slots.

Over the years, corporate America has been able to sponsor foreign-born workers to apply for H-1B visas and let the highly-skilled from overseas fill the gaps in the workforce.

US businesses use the H-1B program to employ foreign workers in occupations that require highly specialized knowledge in fields such as science, engineering and computer programming, according to the US Citizenship and Immigration Services Agency (USCIS).

Each year, the federal government mandates a cap of 65,000 general H-1B visas and 20,000 H-1B visas for those holding degrees of a master's or above. The availability can be exhausted within a few days of the window opening.

This makeshift practice in the US has already stoked a debate over the merits of hiring foreign people at the expense of American citizens who need decent, high-paying jobs. But is the sentiment legitimate and true?

During the filing period last year, the USCIS received almost 233,000 H-1B applications. On April 7, the agency announced that it reached the H1-B cap in both categories and used a computer-generated lottery system to randomly select the petitions.

"The 15-day processing period plus waiting for the lottery outcome is an ordeal for any client," said Lihua Tan, an immigration attorney with Chugh law firm. "I've witnessed too many joys and sorrows. If not awarded the H1-B visa, the affected will lose his or her job and have to leave America."

Moreover, being granted the H1-B work permit does not guarantee a happy-ending, said Tan. The common practice for tech giants is to use cheap labor on demand and suppress their wages.

Ron Hira, a research associate with the Economic Policy Institute, said tech employers hold the work permits through this program, and that gives the company extraordinary leverage over a foreign worker and limits their mobility. Companies can pay $30,000 a year less to a worker on an H-1B visa that remains valid for six years.

According to the Joint Venture Silicon Valley report, foreign-born workers dominate tech sector employment, holding 67 percent of Silicon Valley's computer and math jobs, 61 percent of architectural and engineering jobs, 49 percent of jobs in the natural sciences and 41 percent of medical and health services jobs.

Silicon Valley is well known for being the epicenter of invention and innovation but it should not be the land of a ruthless and unethical business culture. Hopefully, those engineers at Uber can join their families for dinner and kiss their children goodnight.

Contact the writer at junechang@chinadailyusa.com.

Trudeau visits Sina Weibo
May gets little gasp as EU extends deadline for sufficient progress in Brexit talks
Ethiopian FM urges strengthened Ethiopia-China ties
Yemen's ex-president Saleh, relatives killed by Houthis
Most Popular
Hot Topics

...
澜沧| 平陆县| 保康县| 屏边| 天气| 凤山市| 营口市| 尼勒克县| 大埔区| 类乌齐县| 永川市| 龙川县| 仪征市| 司法| 安阳县| 宣武区| 萨迦县| 开化县| 延寿县| 丽江市| 彭泽县| 昂仁县| 方正县| 洪雅县| 牙克石市| 山阳县| 东明县| 兰州市| 平湖市| 贡觉县| 铜山县| 青川县| 浑源县| 信宜市| 阿克陶县| 焦作市| 竹北市| 张家港市| 中西区| 黎城县| 盐城市|