專欄移民

Have skills, can’t travel

A few weeks ago, I visited the headquarters of Motorola Mobility in Libertyville, in industrial Illinois. As I sat in an ultra high-tech display room – where the light switches were controlled with a flick of a mobile phone – I asked Sanjay Jha, the CEO, about his industry’s biggest challenges.

The answer took me aback: instead of grumbling about government red tape, cut-price competition from China, or a shortage of bank loans, Jha declared that America has a “counterproductive” approach to immigration. That was not because Jha shares the concerns about migrants that usually hit the headlines: namely, that America is letting in too many. Instead, Jha says that he finds it hard to hire skilled staff because America is denying visas to non-Americans with the skills he needs – including those who have actually studied in America. “We train a lot of our foreign-born students here in the US and then we don’t give them the right to work here. That has made no sense to me at all,” he observed. “It’s becoming increasingly difficult to get the quality of talent that we need to get the job done.”

This is striking – and paradoxical. America, after all, is a country famously founded by immigrants, who considered migration to be not just an economic benefit, but an expression of liberty too. And even today, immigration remains a powerful force. Between 2000 and 2005, some 8 million legal and illegal migrants arrived in the country, the highest proportion in American history. A large proportion of PhD students are immigrants; and a quarter of all tech start-ups between 1995 and 2005 had an immigrant as co-founder.

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吉蓮•邰蒂

吉蓮•邰蒂(Gillian Tett)擔任英國《金融時報》的助理主編,負責全球金融市場的報導。2009年3月,她榮獲英國出版業年度記者。她1993年加入FT,曾經被派往前蘇聯和歐洲地區工作。1997年,她擔任FT東京分社社長。2003年,她回到倫敦,成爲Lex專欄的副主編。邰蒂在劍橋大學獲得社會人文學博士學位。她會講法語、俄語、日語和波斯語。

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