Donald Trump recently caused a stir when he seemed to advocate for more skilled immigration, stating in an interview that America needs to bring in talent from across the world. His remarks that “you don’t have certain talents” in the US and that “people have to learn” were widely interpreted as a significant softening of his administration’s typically restrictive stance on H-1B visas and high-skilled immigration.
But this apparent policy shift has been put into a new, much stricter context by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. Bessent clarified that this isn’t about opening the doors for skilled workers to stay and compete with Americans. Instead, the policy being crafted is a “train and return” program, where foreign experts are seen as temporary instructors rather than new employees.
The core of this new vision, as explained by Bessent, is “knowledge transfer.” He explicitly stated the guiding principle: “Come to US, train American workers, go home.” This model would invite skilled workers for a defined period, such as “three, five, seven years,” with the express purpose of training the US workforce. After this period, their role is complete, and they are expected to depart.
Bessent justified this need by pointing to specific, high-tech sectors where the US has lost its edge. “An American can’t have that job, not yet,” he said, addressing concerns about replacing domestic workers. He cited shipbuilding and semiconductor manufacturing as prime examples where “we haven’t built” these things in years, leading to a critical gap in domestic expertise that must be filled.
This strategy, Bessent concluded, is a “home run” for the American worker. It directly addresses the skills gap without creating long-term competition. The plan involves “overseas partners coming in, teaching American workers, then returning home.” This ensures that the high-tech and defense manufacturing jobs of the future will be held by a newly upskilled American workforce.
H-1B Reimagined: “Train Americans, Then Go Home,” Says Bessent
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