HIGH-SKILLED IMMIGRANTS IN CALIFORNIA

Learn more about the need for high-skilled immigration reform at www.LetPJStay.com

CALIFORNIA FACES A LARGE STEM SHORTAGE

IMMIGRANTS ARE FILLING STEM SHORTAGES IN CALIFORNIA

IMMIGRANTS INCREASINGLY POWER CALIFORNIA’S INNOVATION ECONOMY

  • Immigrants are more likely to study STEM than the native-born: In 2009, 38.3 percent of the students earning master’s or PhD degrees in STEM fields from California’s research-intensive universities were foreign-born.
  • Immigrants are inventing the products that will drive innovation over the coming decades: In 2011, the University of California system received almost 370 patents, more than any other university system in the country, and in FY 2010 they earned $104.4 million in patent licensure revenue. More than 76 percent of those patents had at least one foreign-born inventor, and 51 percent had at least one foreign-born student, postdoctoral fellow, or researcher, groups with no clear path to stay in the United States after graduation.

HIGH-SKILLED IMMIGRATION REFORM WOULD HELP CALIFORNIA’S COMPANIES COMPETE AND CREATE AMERICAN JOBS

  • High-skilled visa holders create jobs for U.S.-born workers: The new H-1B visas awarded to California between 2010 and 2013 will translate into 117,209 new jobs for U.S.-born workers in the state by 2020.
  • Our visa system is costing jobs and revenue: Firm-level data from the 2007 and 2008 H-1B lotteries shows that the H-1B caps from those two years alone cost U.S.-born tech workers in the Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Jose, and San Diego metropolitan areas as many as 14,117 additional jobs and as much as $410.8 million in aggregate annual earnings by 2010.

Related Resources

Map The Impact

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Our Map the Impact tool has comprehensive coverage of more than 100 data points about immigrants and their contributions in all 50 states and the country overall. It continues to be widely cited in places ranging from Gov. Newsom’s declaration for California’s Immigrant Heritage Month to a Forbes article and PBS’ Two Cents series that targets millennials and Gen Z.

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