Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
International

Donald Trump's Canada-Like Merit-Based Immigration Proposal Could Benefit Indians

IANS, 01 Mar, 2017 12:42 PM
    US President Donald Trump's proposal for a merit-based immigration system has the potential to benefit Indians, a large number of whom have high levels of education and skills.
     
    But this will ultimately depend on the finer details of how the proposal is implemented.
     
    In his State of the Union Address to a joint session of Congress on Tuesday night, Trump said the US should give out green cards using a merit-based system similar to those of Canada and Australia in place of its current "outdated" programme.
     
    "Nations around the world, like Canada, Australia and many others -- have a merit-based immigration system," he said. 
     
    "It is a basic principle that those seeking to enter a country ought to be able to support themselves financially."
     
    By not following such a system, he said the US was "straining the very public resources that our poorest citizens rely upon.
     
    "Switching away from this current system of lower-skilled immigration, and instead adopting a merit-based system, will have many benefits: it will save countless dollars, raise workers' wages, and help struggling families -- including immigrant families -- enter the middle class," he said.
     
    Trump did not make any mention of those working in the US on temporary professional work visas known as H-1B. 
     
    In earlier speeches, he had said that he would root out abuses in that visa category and restrict them if they were to throw Americans out of work.
     
     
    Those who qualify for H1-B visas under more stringent conditions either imposed by the Trump Administration or by a bill introduced jointly by a Republican and a Democratic in Congress would likely have a leg up in the merit system.
     
    Any drastic reform of the immigration process will be a difficult undertaking for Trump.
     
    Trump did not spell out how the merit-based system would work.
     
    On the face of it, Indians would make a good fit for a merit-based system going by the community's current profile. 
     
    According to a report by the Pew Research Center, 70 percent of Indians in the US are college graduates. 
     
    The US Census Bureau reported that in 2013, the median household income for Indian families was over $100,000.
     
    But there are other factors such as whether the current national quotas or limits on people from any country who could be admitted in a year are retained could ultimately determine how it plays out for Indians.
     
    The proposal will have to clear many hurdles. 
     
    First of all, it will run into opposition mainly from the Democratic Party which would argue that it would not help the poor and the unskilled immigrate to the US and discriminate against immigrants from Latin American countries whom the party counts as a key part of its base.
     
    A way out for Trump might be to barter the merit-based reform for allowing some illegal immigrants to stay on in the country.
     
    In Canada, applicants for immigration are given points for different qualifications like education, skill levels, employability, language and family ties. 
     
     
    They would have to meet a minimum score to be allowed to immigrate.
     
    Currently, the US immigration system restricts the number of people who can immigrate from each country to seven percent of the total number allowed in except for immediate relatives of citizens. 
     
    This has led to several years' wait for Indians to get their green cards.
     
    There is also an annual limit of 140,000 on employment-based green cards.
     
    Because of the limits, most professionals from India have to wait as long as 12 years for a green card and those with "exceptional qualifications" nine years, according to the State Department visa availability data for March.
     
    A merit-based system has the potential to cut down the wait.
     
    How the reform would ultimately affect Indians could depend on how country limits and the cap on the number of employment visas are retained or handled and also on the retention of the immigration privileges for brothers and sisters of citizens and their families.
     
    The reform may also affect the ability of brothers and sisters and elderly parents of citizens to immigrate if they are subjected to a points system.
     
     
    "I believe that real and positive immigration reform is possible as long as we focus on the following goals: to improve jobs and wages for Americans, to strengthen our nation's security, and to restore respect for our laws," Trump said.
     
    He appealed to the Democrats for bipartisan support for immigration reform. 
     
    "If we are guided by the well-being of American citizens, then I believe Republicans and Democrats can work together to achieve an outcome that has eluded our country for decades," he said.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Syrian Man Tried In Germany Over Abduction Of Canadian UN Observer

    Syrian Man Tried In Germany Over Abduction Of Canadian UN Observer
    BERLIN — A Syrian man charged with war crimes for allegedly participating in the 2013 kidnapping of a United Nations observer — believed to be a Canadian lawyer — has gone on trial in Germany.

    Syrian Man Tried In Germany Over Abduction Of Canadian UN Observer

    Running For President A Step Down For My Dad: Trump Junior

    Republican Presidential candidate Donald Trump's son thinks that running for president is a "step down" for his father who is very new to politics.

    Running For President A Step Down For My Dad: Trump Junior

    Hillary Clinton Wins Final Debate, But Trump Stumps With Results Comment

    Hillary Clinton Wins Final Debate, But Trump Stumps With Results Comment
    The key moment in the debate came near the end when moderator Chris Wallace challenged Trump to say whether he will accept the results of the November 8 election.

    Hillary Clinton Wins Final Debate, But Trump Stumps With Results Comment

    Majority Of Indian-Americans Prefer Hillary Clinton Over Donald Trump: Survey

    Majority Of Indian-Americans Prefer Hillary Clinton Over Donald Trump: Survey
    Majority of Indian-Americans prefer Hillary Clinton over Donald Trump as their choice for the next US President when it comes to issues of immigration, religious freedom and outsourcing, a Silicon Valley-based think tank has said.

    Majority Of Indian-Americans Prefer Hillary Clinton Over Donald Trump: Survey

    Electoral Reform Needs 'Substantial' Support, Clamour For Change Subsiding: PM Trudeau

    Electoral Reform Needs 'Substantial' Support, Clamour For Change Subsiding: PM Trudeau
     Is Justin Trudeau laying the groundwork for reneging on his promise to make the 2015 federal election the last to be conducted under the first-past-the-post voting system?

    Electoral Reform Needs 'Substantial' Support, Clamour For Change Subsiding: PM Trudeau

    Political Debate Turning Americans Against Each Other: Neera Tanden

    Political Debate Turning Americans Against Each Other: Neera Tanden
      "The political debate this election season is turning Americans against each other," Ms Tanden, co-chair of the Clinton Transition Team said during the first 'Town Hall Meeting: Election 2016'.

    Political Debate Turning Americans Against Each Other: Neera Tanden