2007年3月8日 盖茨:限制移民不利美国经济
微软(Microsoft)董事长、世界首富比尔o盖茨(Bill Gates)昨日警告称,限制进入美国的熟练工人数量的规定,已使美国的竞争力面临风险。 Bill Gates, the chairman of Microsoft and the world's richest man, gave warning yesterday that restrictions on the number of skilled workers allowed to enter the US put the country's competitiveness at risk. "It makes no sense to tell well-trained, highly skilled individuals, many of whom are educated at our top colleges and universities, that the United States does not welcome or value them," Mr Gates said. "America will find it infinitely more difficult to maintain its technological leadership if it shuts out the very people who are most able to help us compete." Mr Gates said that other countries were taking advantage of restrictive US policies by catering to highly skilled workers who would otherwise choose to study, live and work in the US. "Our lost opportunities are their gains," he said. "I personally witness the ill effects of these policies on an almost daily basis at Microsoft." Mr Gates's comments on immigration were part of a broader warning by the Microsoft chairman over the state of US competitiveness. Mr Gates said he felt "deep anxiety" about America's ability to remain competitive if it did not act quickly to improve education, invest in basic science research, and reform its immigration policies. Mr Gates called on Congress to loosen rules that prevent many foreign students from settling once their studies at US universities are complete. He also suggested that Congress speed the process of obtaining permanent resident status for highly skilled workers. The US currently limits visas for skilled foreign workers to 65,000 a year, while the number of green cards, required for permanent resident status is limited to 140,000 a year. |