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    Home » Sections » Education and skills » Trump’s visa overhaul hits India’s IT titans

    Trump’s visa overhaul hits India’s IT titans

    US President Donald Trump’s $100 000 H-1B visa fee directly threatens India’s $283-billion IT sector.
    By Agency Staff22 September 2025
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    Trump's visa overhaul hits India's IT titansIndia’s US$283-billion (R4.9-trillion) IT sector will have to overhaul its decades-old strategy of rotating skilled talent into US projects following US President Donald Trump’s move to impose a $100 000 fee for new H-1B visas from Sunday, according to tech veterans, analysts, lawyers and economists.

    The sector, which earns about 57% of its total revenue from the US market, has long gained from US work visa programmes and the outsourcing of software and business services — a contentious issue for many Americans who have lost jobs to cheaper workers in India.

    India was by far the largest beneficiary of H-1B visas last year, accounting for 71% of approved beneficiaries, while China was a distant second at 11.7%, according to US government data.

    Services exports have finally been dragged into the ongoing global trade and tech war

    Trump’s move to reshape the H-1B programme will force IT firms with clients such as Apple, JPMorgan Chase, Walmart, Microsoft, Meta and Google to pause onshore rotations, accelerate offshore delivery and ramp up hiring of US citizens and green card holders, experts said.

    “The ‘American Dream’ for aspiring workers will be tough,” Ganesh Natarajan, former CEO of IT outsourcer Zensar Technologies, said, adding that he expected firms to restrict cross-border travel and get more work done out of countries such as India, Mexico and the Philippines.

    IT firms Tata Consultancy Services, Infosys, HCLTech, Wipro and Tech Mahindra did not respond to requests seeking comment. Industry body Nasscom said the move would “potentially have ripple effects on America’s innovation ecosystem” and disrupt business continuity for onshore projects.

    Frantic calls

    “Services exports have finally been dragged into the ongoing global trade and tech war,” Emkay global chief economist Madhavi Arora said, adding that it could disrupt the IT sector’s onsite-offshore model, pressuring margins, and supply chain.

    Most industry watchers expect Trump’s move to constrain client-facing roles, hurting IT deal conversion and extending the time taken to scale up tech projects.

    “Clients will demand repricing or delay start dates until there is clarity on legal challenges. Some projects will be re-scoped to reduce onshore staffing. Others will shift delivery offshore or near-shore from day one,” HFS Research CEO Phil Fersht said.

    Read: Trump threatens global tariff war over digital taxes

    Immigration lawyers, who received frantic calls over the weekend due to the chaos and confusion created by Trump’s proclamation, in which he accused the IT sector of manipulating the H-1B system, said the new visa fee was steep.

    “We expect that companies will become far more selective in deciding which candidates to sponsor, reserving H-1B filings for only the most business-critical roles,” said Vic Goel, managing partner at US law firm Goel & Anderson. “This would significantly reduce access to the H-1B programme for many skilled foreign nationals and could reshape employer demand.”

    US President Donald Trump
    US President Donald Trump

    Before the White House clarified that the order applied only to new applicants and not holders of existing visas or those seeking renewals, companies including Tata Consultancy Services, Eli Lilly, Microsoft, JPMorgan and Amazon advised employees on H-1B visas to stay put or return to the US before Sunday, forcing many workers from India and China to abandon travel plans and rush back.

    Many immigration lawyers expect Trump’s move to be challenged legally soon.

    “We are anticipating that several lawsuits will be immediately forthcoming this week,” Alcorn Immigration Law CEO Sophie Alcorn said.

    Time zone proximity will accelerate GCCs and resourcing in Canada, Mexico and Latin America

    The fresh challenge for the Indian IT sector comes as it awaits clarity on a proposed 25% tax on outsourcing payments and struggles with weak revenue growth in its mainstay US market as clients defer non-essential tech spending amid inflationary pressures and tariff uncertainty.

    Across the board, industry watchers expect Trump’s move to accelerate the growth of US firms’ global capability centres (GCCs), which have evolved from low-cost offshore backoffices to high-value innovation hubs that support operations, finance, research and development.

    “Time zone proximity will accelerate GCCs and resourcing in Canada, Mexico and Latin America, where talent is stable and cost advantages remain,” ISG president and chief AI officer Steven Hall said. “GCCs in India will also continue to rise with broader capabilities and skills as enterprises shift strategic roles to India.”

    ‘New world order’

    India, currently home to more than half of the world’s GCCs, is projected to host more than 2 200 companies by 2030, with a market size nearing $100-billion and generating up to 2.8 million jobs, according to a Nasscom-Zinnov report released last year.

    Silicon Valley-based Constellation Research founder and chairman Ray Wang expects Trump’s move to lead to more GCCs in India, more local hiring in the US, more pressure to deliver automation and AI at the same time, less outsourcing, fewer H-1B visas and less job mobility.

    Read: South African employers race to hire AI talent

    “We are seeing a new world order on services economics,” Wang said.  — Haripriya Suresh, Sai Ishwarbharath B, Rishika Sadam, Abhirami G and Urvi Manoj Dugar, (c) 2025 Reuters

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