1 comments

  • ggm3 hours ago
    The government made this change for effects at scale, not for effect at individuals. All kinds of countercases are going to emerge and for myself, were I king for a day, this isn&#x27;t an act I would have cast. But, I do think it&#x27;s important to remember, the aim is to stop people coming.<p>In short, no matter how much shareholder value you make now, the goal is to advantage a domestic person into the role. If a company wants you enough, it has to cast fetters of gold to make it happen and if that excludes, that&#x27;s by design.<p>I am sorry, because I hate this, but I see this message as confirming the policy is doing what this government wants it to do. The millions Jason made, the government wanted made by a native son.<p>The question &quot;can they weave the same magic&quot; isn&#x27;t being asked or answered.
    • sparkie3 hours ago
      Policy changes wouldn&#x27;t be needed if the existing policy weren&#x27;t exploitable for cheaper labour. For every brilliant individual there are dozens of mediocre individuals. The policy is intended to stop the latter and not the former.<p>Whether it&#x27;s the right policy of course is questionable, and we could debate the details all day, but <i>something</i> needed changing to give domestic workers the advantage, because they&#x27;ve been disadvantaged by the H-1B programme for years now.<p>Disclaimer: I&#x27;m a UK citizen, not from US, but I still applaud these changes even though it would make it much more difficult, if not impossible for me to get a job in the US. We have similar problems here - perhaps much worse even - and not just for skilled jobs but more so for unskilled labour. Standard of living in the UK is degrading at a rapid rate, and uncontrolled immigration is a leading factor in that. Governments only care about GDP, but it&#x27;s GDP per capita that matters, and that is in decline.
      • ggm3 hours ago
        I think the economics here are not that reductive. Yes, American domestic workers were displaced. And, lots of other Americans made a lot of money in their Roth, and got to buy cheaper goods and services. Doesn&#x27;t help the unemployment problem. Did help everyone else.<p>The same pressures are visible in Germany. Merkel responded to business need for 1.5m more workers. The overwhelming majority are productive and enough are visibly not, and different she&#x27;s ignited a racist backlash. Nobody has managed to convince me the 1.5m body count wasn&#x27;t needed.<p>America has always grown economically through immigration. It&#x27;s also always been painful.
        • sparkie2 hours ago
          As you mentioned earlier though, the issue isn&#x27;t immigration per se, but the scale of it, which has been accelerating even though its been obvious for some time that we&#x27;re already beyond the point at which it is beneficial to economy or society in other ways. The backlash is inevitable - it doesn&#x27;t benefit the lives or ordinary folk. It must be scaled back, but if governments aren&#x27;t willing to remedy that, they&#x27;ll invite in a populist government which will turn the needle the other way, as has happened in the US.<p>Turning the needle the other way will also likely to be detrimental to the economy in the long term, but the insistence on labelling ordinary people with legitimate concerns as &quot;racist&quot; so as to ignore them is what has created the political division, absence of any centrist politics, and rise of extremism on both sides.<p>The remedy is to scale back the rate of immigration, not cut it out entirely.