The US has been the backbone of India’s IT sector, contributing nearly 57 per cent of total revenues. The model has relied ...
The global consulting firm estimates more than half of the world’s postconsumer aluminum scrap is collected in a mixed format ...
DONALD Trump's sticker shock on H-1B visas risks disrupting Indian tech firms' US projects, and is forcing Prime Minister Narendra Modi to once again deal with the fallout from America First policies.
TCS is the biggest Indian receiver of H-1B visas at 5,505. Infosys (2,004), LTIMindtree (1,844), HCL America (HCL Tech arm, 1,728) and Wipro (1,523) are among other key beneficiaries.
The Trump administration’s proposed $100,000 H-1B visa fee threatens to disrupt the flow of Indian talent underpinning U.S. tech innovation. While American firms risk higher costs and constrained ...
Some major tech companies urged their H-1B employees to race back to the U.S. and curb travel abroad, The Seattle Times ...
President Donald Trump’slatest plan to overhaul the American immigration system has left some immigrant workers confused, ...
Despite their high salaries, some tech workers, lawyers and financiers are concerned by New York’s rising cost of living, and ...
India's $283 billion information technology sector will have to overhaul its decades-old strategy of rotating skilled talent ...
Tech giants face a new $100,000 annual H-1B visa fee per worker, raising labor costs significantly. Learn more about the ...
More than half a million high-skilled U.S. workers are in the country through the H-1B program, which is heavily used by the ...