Posts Tagged ‘immigration’

International Students Are Gold to Your Community

Friday, August 27th, 2010

I had a great time yesterday welcoming the incoming class of international students at Cuyahoga Community College in Cleveland.

I reminded the international students that they are GOLD to the colleges and communities that welcome them.

Unfortunately, many cities and states around the U.S. are unaware of the economic impac…t that international students bring to their community — and don’t do a good job in welcoming, conneting and integrating these international newcomers.

Yesterday we discussed the recent study that found that the number of international students studying in the U.S. is at its highest peak ever, over 670,000. These students and their dependents contribute over $17 billion per annum to the U.S. economy in tuition and living expenses.

More important, however, is the economic impact these global wunderkinds bring to their communities after they graduate —- in terms of innovation, entrepreneurship, advanced degrees, and global cultural and language skills.

Studies show:

* internationals are receiving U.S. patents at a 2:1 ratio compared to American-born.

* immigrants are starting businesses at nearly twice the rate of American-born.

* immigrants are more likely to have an advanced degree compared to American born (nearly 70% of the people who entered the fields of science and engineering from 1995 to 2006 were immigrants);

* over 50% of the companies in Silicon Valley were founded by an immigrant (25% of the tech companies nationwide)

* from 1990-2005, immigrants founded 1/4 of all venture-backed public companies (add a high tech label, and the percentage jumps to 40%)

Think of the New Economy rock star entrepreneurs and you’ll see immigrants everywhere: Sergey Brin (Google), Pierre Omidyar (eBay), Elon Musk (PayPal, Tesla Motors), Jerry Yang (Yahoo), Andy Grove (Intel), Vinod Khosla (Sun Microsytem), and the founders of companies like YouTube, LinkedIn, and many others.

This is not a new phenomenon — think of the immigrants who founded Dow Chemical, DuPont, Procter & Gamble, U.S. Steel (Carnegie Steel), Pfizer, and many other icons of American capitalism.

Millions of American jobs have been created by immigrants —- and many of these immigrant entrepreneurs first came to the U.S. to study at an American university. Over half ot the country’s immigrant tech entrepreneurs came to the U.S. to study at an American university

American universities are the magnet for the world’s best, brightest, and most entrepreneurial.

As our economy continues to struggle, let’s not forget this competitive advantage and do more to leverage it.

Helping Immigrant Entrepreneurs Flourish

Friday, August 27th, 2010

I live in and love Cleveland — a once-great city that was part of the “silicon valley” of the late-18th/early-19th century industrial revolution.

Having just returned from Vancouver and Seattle, I reflected on what it takes for cities to be competitive, prosperous and vibrant in the 21st century.

100 years ago, the… rust belt cities of Cleveland, Detroit, Pittsburgh led the world in industrial patents and the creation of game-changing companies. This is the land of Carnegie, Ford, Rockefeller, Firestone, Dow, and many other entrepreneurs who helped change the world.

Immigrants played a key role in the economic success of the Great Lakes region at the dawn of the 20th century.

Cities like Cleveland attracted folks from all over the world at that time —- 30% of the 1,000,000 population was foreign-born. Today, only about 5% of Cleveland’s population comes from abroad —- and the overall population has dropped below 400,000.

The exodus of people has been accompanied by a decline in innovation and the entrepreneurial spirit. Not good timing, as countries like China and India move-up on the value chain of a knowledge-based economy — in countries where acquisition of advanced education is a contact sport. (Only 6% of Greater Cleveland’s population holds an advanced degree, 5% in Detroit, and 20% in Seattle.)

The rust belt region needs to reboot.

To create its New Economy, it will need an army of entrepreneurs and innovators, ready to compete globally.

The only way to quickly build this army is by recruiting and attracting American migrants and immigrants. The low hanging fruit is to attract immigrants—- to lay out the welcome mat for those who are predisposed to pick-up and move, to take risks, and to endure the pain inherent in the pursuit of opportunity in the challenging frontier.

Back to Canada.

In Vancouver, 40% of the population is foreign born.

Toronto, a five hour drive from Cleveland, is similarly immigrant-rch, with over 50% of its population born abroad.

To offer just a peek at how Canada does such a good job at the federal and local level to encourage and welcome immigrant newcomers, check this out.

The Hamilton Chamber of Commrece in Ontario, Canada, is leading an new exciting initiative called “Diversity Works” — a program that is designed to:

a.) increase the capacity of local companies to recruit and hire foreign born talent

b.) mentor immigrant entrepreneurs

As reported in this article, Hamilton Chamber of Commerce president Richard Koroscil said recently:

“‘It’s a well-known fact that in coming years Hamilton will be seeing a shortage of skilled workers and we’re going to rely on immigration to fill those gaps,’” he said.

Studies by agencies such as the Conference Board of Canada support that view of the future, warning at current birth and retirement rates, by 2030 Canada will not be able to fill 500,000 jobs.

In the closer future, by 2017 it’s expected the majority of new jobs in Canada will be filled by immigrants.Ontario Citizenship Minister Eric Hoskins said those forces create a special challenge for Ontario.

“Immigration and the highly skilled workforce that will develop because of that is an economic imperative,” he said. “We can’t allow the challenges of integrating newcomers to stop us.”

The Diversity Works program is designed to help this problem in two ways.

One stream will provide recruitment and human resources support to employers, especially small businesses, looking to hire skilled immigrants. It’s hoped 200 local firms will benefit from that help.

The second stream will link newcomer entrepreneurs with Canadian mentors who will help them get started.The program will launch at the end of this month with 15 mentor-mentee pairs, including Kaleu and area businessman James Radcliffe, of SCS Machine Services. It’s a match Kaleu hopes will give him a chance to start manufacturing his ecological tools by linking his company name with an established player.

Diversity Works is financed by the federal and provincial governments. Other sponsors include Settlement and Integration Services Organization, Mohawk College, McMaster University’s DeGroote business school, the Hamilton Centre for Civic Inclusion, the city, John C. Munro Hamilton International Airport, Volunteer Hamilton, the Hamilton Training Advisory Board and Scotiabank Group.

The initiative is one part of a broader Hamilton Immigration Strategy and Action Plan aimed at helping newcomers fit in to their new country by strengthening settlement services, employment aid, encouraging foreign credential recognition and other aid.”

Canada has done a great job in averting much of most serious fall-out from the global financial crisis. It has done a similarly great job in promoting a welcoming culture for immigrant talent (60% of the 250,000 Canadian “green cards” issued each year go to skilled immigrants; compare that with the U.S. where less than 15% of the 1,000,000 green cards issued each year are reserved for skilled immigrants).

Despite the popular phrase heard in Canada, “No Worries,” its clear that Canada has been worrying and working hard to build an infrastructure that emphasizes TALENT, regardless of accent or passport, as the key to success in in the global economy.

I hope that the lessons from our neighbors to the North will not be lost on the rust belt and the White House.

Obama’s National Security Strategy Acknowledges the Contributions of Immigrants

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

The foundation of any country’s national security is its economy.

With a weakening economy in the U.S, particularly while the economies of China and India continue to grow, America’s national security is at risk.

As Edward Alden, a Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations writes,

“The engine of that economic growth is innovation, the capacity of Americans to be the first to invent, design and reap the profits from the next generation of technologies that will transform the way we live. As President Obama put it in his introduction to the strategy paper: “Simply put, we must see American innovation as a foundation of American power.”

That’s where immigration comes in.

In his “National Security Strategy” recently delivered to Congress, President Obama makes the argument that the strength of America’s economy (and by extension, its national security) depends in no small measure on America’s ability to act as a magnet for the world’s innovators, entrepreneurs, and highly-skilled talent.

Alden writes,

“The National Security Strategy (NSS), which is sent to Congress every four years, is designed to lay out in broad terms the administration’s philosophy on what is needed to protect the vital interests of the United States. It generally focuses on short and long-term military and other security threats. The most famous NSS, which was released by the Bush administration in 2002, created the rationale for the subsequent invasion of Iraq by stating that the United States would act to pre-empt potential security threats.

That’s the only way in which immigration has ever figured in previous administration strategy papers – as a threat. Most have made some passing reference to the need to control illegal immigration. The Clinton administration’s first strategy paper also warned that American openness to immigration raised the danger of economic espionage. The Bush NSS of 2002 was entirely silent on the issue.

But the Obama administration’s strategy shows a deeper understanding of the contribution of immigrants to America’s national security. The paper, for the first time, places immigration reform in the broader context of U.S. national interests. It starts with an obvious but all too often overlooked point: that America’s economy is the foundation of its national security. The United States will be unable to meet its security and political commitments around the world unless the economy recovers and grows more strongly in the future.

The engine of that economic growth is innovation, the capacity of Americans to be the first to invent, design and reap the profits from the next generation of technologies that will transform the way we live. As President Obama put it in his introduction to the strategy paper: “Simply put, we must see American innovation as a foundation of American power.”

That’s where immigration fits in. The United States has been alone among the world’s big powers in its ability to attract and retain the most talented immigrants from across the world, and it has been a remarkable windfall. Some 45 percent of the nation’s science and engineering Ph.D.s, and 65 percent of its computer science doctorates, are earned by students who were born abroad. America easily leads the world in the number of patents issued each year, and a quarter of those go to immigrant scientists and inventors, a hugely disproportionate number.

The Obama strategy, while hardly sanguine about the many economic challenges facing the United States, explicitly recognizes the strengths that come from such diversity. Immigration, the paper argues, must be part of the overall American strategy for strengthening its human capital. Improved schools, better science and math training, increased international education and exchange, and the reform of immigration laws are all part of a strategy to “ensure that the most innovative ideas take root in America.”

“Our ability to innovate, our ties to the world, and our economic prosperity depend on our nation’s capacity to welcome and assimilate immigrants,” the paper says.”

http://newamericamedia.org/2010/05/obamas-national-security-strategy-could-upend-immigration-debate.php

——————-

On a related note, I have co-written a paper on how a new immigration system could accelerate the American path to energy independence and greater national security by welcoming more of the world’s top energy scientists and researchers.

Many good proposals on fixing immigration to turbocharge America’s economy have been offered.

Congress, however, continues to play politics over sound policy and national interests.

For decades, Congress has declined to craft an immigration system that makes the American economy stronger.

While we wait for Congress to do its job on immigration reform, the American economy continues to sputter, Asian and oil-producing economies continue to strengthen, and the interests of national security take a back seat.

Cleveland-Area Pols Are Talking About Immigration as a Solution

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

While much of the country is embroiled in the emotional issue surrounding undocumented immigration and the controversy over the immigration law in Arizona, some see immigration as a solution, not a detriment, to the economy.

Around the country, the seeds of a a new political discourse on leveraging the benefits of immigration (entrepreneurship, innovation, global connections, exports, new homeownership and consumers, etc.) are beginning to sprout.

Take Cleveland, Ohio —- a city struggling to find answers to progressive depopulation and a slow transition to the New Economy.

Yesterday, Tom Beres of WKYC-TV/NBC affiliate reported that Ed Fitzgerald, a mayor of a diverse city adjacent to Cleveland, and the front-runner in the Democratic Primary for the newly formed County Executive office in Cuyahoga County, is supporting immigration-based economic development strategies as a way to re-boot the local economy and catalyze an entrepreneurial culture.

Excerpt:

“Ironically, on the second anniversary of the federal raid of Cuyahoga County offices in the corruption probe, candidates for Cuyahoga County Executive spoke of their own ideas for the future of the county at the Cleveland Public Library.

But voters’ decision to makeover government was about more than eliminating corruption. The new county charter makes economic development a top priority of the county.

In the past, its economic development initiatives focused on large projects, like Gateway and the Medical Mart.

Candidates offered insight into their priorities…..

Democrat Lakewood Mayor Ed Fitzgerald’s agenda included support for wooing immigrants here to help boost the economy.”

http://origin.wkyc.com/news/politics_govt/politics_article.aspx?storyid=141346

In states like Ohio, where the undocumented and legal immigrant population is miniscule (less than one-tenth of a percent, and three percent, respectively), most everyone in that state is worried about one thing: where will the new industries, new jobs, and tax revenue come from?

Immigrants are clearly part of the solution.

Studies by the Kauffman Foundation and others have documented the out-sized economic contributions made by immigrants who start neighborhood businesses, who invent something and launch high-tech companies, or who simply move into a struggling neighborhood and help boost the local tax revenue. Much has also been written about the intangibles that immigrants bring to struggling communities —– the hope, the drive, the sometimes-irrational optimism that can help raise a community off its knees.

In Cleveland, as the massive county reform agenda barrels forward, more pols are beginning to publicly tout the job-creating and community-revitalization benefits of attracting legal immigrants.

Two candidates running for office in the newly-formed Cuyahoga County Council, the legislative branch of the new county government, are touting this new direction:

“He (Nelson Cintron) and Ronayne (Chris) cited the importance of luring immigrants to the county. Cintron said they would fill the vacant storefronts with small businesses.

Ronayne said the county needs to support a Cleveland international welcome center to attract legal immigrants and their families.”

http://www.cleveland.com/cuyahoga-county-reform/index.ssf/2010/07/cuyahoga_county_district_3_candidates_look_to_allay_safety_concerns.html

Despite strong policy arguments, it still takes some courage to use the “i” word this way in public discussion.

And especially during election season.

In Cleveland, and other rust belt cities, straight talk about crisis and innovative solutions in a global economy is not a luxury.

It’s a necessity.

Federal Judge Blocks Key Portions of Arizona Law From Going Into Effect Tomorrow

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

Breaking News: U.S. Federal District Judge Blocks Key Portions of Arizona Immigration Law

On the eve of the Arizona immigration law going into effect, Judge Susan R. Bolton grants the U.S. Government’s motion for an injunction to stop the following provisions from becoming law in Arizona tomorrow:

“1.) Section 2 of SB …1070: Requiring that an officer make a reasonable attempt to determine the imigration status of a person stopped, detained or arrested if there is a reasonable suspicion that the person is unlawfuly present in the United States, and requiring verification of the immigration status of any person arrested prior to releasing that person;

2.) Section 3 of SB 1070: Creating a crime for the failure to apply for or carry alien registration papers;

3.) Portion of Section 5 of SB 1070: Creating a crime for an unauthorized alien to solicit, apply for, or perforom work; and

4.) Section 6 of SB 1070: authorizing the warrantless arrest of a person where there is probable cause to believe the person has committed a public offense that makes the person removable from the United States”

A copy of Judge’s Order can be found here:

www.azd.uscourts.gov/azd/courtinfo.nsf/983700DFEE44B56B0725776E005D6CCB/$file/10-1413-87.pdf?openelement

The Washington Times reports

“A federal judge in Phoenix on Wednesday blocked sections of Arizona’s new immigration law, saying the provisions place too many burdens on legal immigrants, U.S. citizens and the federal government.

Ruling a day before the law was to go into effect, Judge Susan R. Bolton said requiring police to check the immigration status of those they arrest or whom they stop and suspect are in the country illegally would overwhelm the federal government’s ability to respond, and could mean legal immigrants are wrongly arrested.

“Federal resources will be taxed and diverted from federal enforcement priorities as a result of the increase in requests for immigration status determination that will flow from Arizona,” Judge Bolton wrote in partially granting of the Obama administration’s request to halt implementation the law.

The judge did leave in place requirements that require state officials cooperate with federal authorities to remove illegal immigrants and that allow police to charge vehicles that stop to pick up day-laborers if they impede traffic.”

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2010/jul/28/judge-blocks-key-parts-ariz-immigration-law/

Buffalo’s New Immigrant Entrepreneurs, and Indy’s Efforts to Welcome the World

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

Nice story by Dino Grandoni in the Buffalo News yesterday on immigrants and jumpstarting an entrepreneurial culture in the rust belt:

http://www.buffalonews.com/business/article81042.ece

Here’s an excerpt:

“Today’s immigrants and refugees are increasingly striking out on their own and starting businesses.

According to the Small Business Administration, 28.7 percent of all new businesses in New York State are started by newcomers….

“I think it’s going to be increasingly common that immigrants and refugees start businesses,” said Eva Hassett, executive director of the International Institute. Her office assists immigrants and refugees in Buffalo….

The number of refugees coming to Erie County has surged over the past decade. Since October 2003, the county has received more refugees than any other county in the state — 5,643. New York City received 4,661 during the same time period.

“In some way, immigrants and refugees are the only people coming to Buffalo,” Hassett said. “It’s part of our economic development.”

Coming here in 1985 from Ethiopia, Getenet Bezunehyhe was a bellwether for African immigrants who would flock to places like New York in the following years. When he applied for resettlement to the United States, he intended to do the same.

“I thought Buffalo was a suburb of New York City,” he said. “I didn’t know it was a very snowy place.”

Few immigrants have had to endure what Bezunehyhe went through to get to this country: four years in jail for demonstrating against Ethiopia’s former communist regime and three more as a refugee in Sudan.

After arriving, he found work at the former Tunmore Nissan Group as a “lot boy” while taking night courses at Buffalo State College. He worked his way up from the lowest paid person at the dealership to car detailer and eventually to supervisor in four years.

Then, at the suggestion of some friends, he decided to start his own car detailing shop in 1989 in the Tunmore dealership. It’s a path common for immigrant entrepreneurs: work for several years, learn English and build up enough credit and savings to go into business.

Since starting his Clean Machines Auto Detail 21 years ago, Getty, as he is known around the shop, has purchased his own building in Kenmore, which he recently had renovated for $200,000. With the addition of a 3,000-square-foot garage, he plans to hire four or five more detailers and begin hand-washing 150 to 300 cars a week.

“He lives, breathes, eats, and sleeps his business,” manager Nick Crocco said. “He’s really dedicated to the craft.’”

2.) The International Center of Indianapolis has issued its Progress Report for 2009: “Connecting Indiana and the World”

http://www.icenterindy.org/pdf/International%20Center%20Brochure%20-%20Electronic%20Version.pdf

The report includes a quote from Mark Miles, President and CEO of the Central Indiana Corporate Partnership:

“Increasingly, Indianapolis’ success in attracting and retaining business depends upon recognizing, understanding, and reacting constructively to many different people within our global economy, and the International Center’s Office of Protocol will bring a key advantage to economic development efforts in the city.”

Serving businesses, universities/schools, government agencies and non-profits, the International Center of Indianapolis describes its mission as “providing tools for working with an international workforce and client base.”

Interestingly, the Center also provides comprehensive international relocation assistance, for client companies hiring foreign nationals as well as for companies transferring U.S. employees to locations outside the U.S.

The International Center’s supporters and funders include:

Duke Energy
Eli Lilly and Company
Lilly Endowment, inc.
Dow AgroSciences
Indiana University
Purdue University
Roche Diagnostic

For more info:
http://www.icenterindy.org/


Richard Herman, Esq.
Richard T. Herman & Associates, LLC
Attorneys at Law
The Superior Building
815 Superior Ave, Suite 1225
Cleveland, Ohio 44114
216-696-6170
216-375-0231 cell
216-696-0104 fax
www.greencardpeople.com

“Immigration Counsel to Global Talent & World-Class Companies”

Co-Chair, TiE Ohio (The International Entrepreneur)
www.tieohio.org

Co-Author, Immigrant, Inc. — Why Immigrant Entrepreneurs Are Driving the New Economy (and how they will save the American worker) (Wiley. 2009)

Book Website
http://www.immigrantinc.com/

Book Promo Video Clip
http://www.youtube.com/user/Immigrantinc2010

Why Immigrants Can Drive the Green Economy

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

Raymond Spencer, an Australian‐born entrepreneur based in Chicago, has a window on the future–and a gusto for investing after founding a high‐technology consulting company that sold for more than $1 billion in 2006. “I have investments in maybe 10 start‐ups, all of which fall within a broad umbrella of a ‘green’ theme,” he said.

“And it’s interesting, the vast majority are either led by immigrants or have key technical people who are immigrants.”

It should come as no surprise that immigrants will help drive the green revolution. America’s young scientists and engineers, especially the ones drawn to emerging industries like alternative energy, tend to speak with an accent.

The 2000 Census found that immigrants, while accounting for 12 percent of the population, made up nearly half of the all scientists and engineers with doctorate degrees. Their importance will only grow. Nearly 70 percent of the men and women who entered the fields of science and engineering from 1995 to 2006 were immigrants.

Yet, the connection between immigration and the development and commercialization of alternative energy technology is rarely discussed. Policymakers envision millions of new jobs as the nation pursues renewable energy sources, like wind and solar power, and builds a smart grid to tap it.

But Dan Arvizu, the leading expert on solar power and the director of the National Renewable Energy Laboratory of the U.S. Department of Energy in Golden, Colorado, warns that much of the clean‐technology talent lies overseas, in nations that began pursuing alternative energy sources decades ago.

The 2000 Census found that immigrants, while accounting for 12 percent of the population, made up nearly half of the all scientists and engineers with doctorate degrees. Their importance will only grow.

Expanding our own clean‐tech industry will require working closely with foreign nations and foreign‐born scientists, he said. Immigration restrictions are making collaboration difficult. His lab’s efforts to work with a Chinese energy lab, for example, were stalled due to U.S. immigration barriers.

“We can’t get researchers over here,” Arvizu, the son of a once‐undocumented immigrant from Mexico, said in an interview in March 2009, his voice tinged with dismay. “It makes no sense to me. We need a much more enlightened approach.”

Dr. Zhao Gang, the Vice Director of the Renewable Energy and New Energy International Cooperation Planning Office of the Ministry of Science and Technology in China, says that America needs that enlightenment fast. “The Chinese government continues to impress upon the Obama administration that immigration restrictions are creating major impediments to U.S.‐China collaboration on clean energy development,” he said during a recent speech in Cleveland.

So what’s the problem? Some of it can be attributed to national security restrictions that impede international collaboration on clean energy. But Arvizu places greater weight on immigration barriers, suggesting that national secrecy is less important in the fast‐paced world of green‐tech development. “We are innovating so fast here, what we do today is often outdated tomorrow.

Finding solutions to alternative energy is a complex, global problem that requires global teamwork,” he said.

We need an immigration system that prioritizes the attraction and retention of scarce, high‐end talent needed to invent and commercialize alternative energy technology and other emerging technologies.

One idea we floated by Arvizu was a new immigrant “Energy Scientist Visa,” providing fast‐track green cards for Ph.D.s with the most promising energy research, as reviewed by a panel of top U.S. scientists. Arvizu enthusiastically responded, “Wow, that’s a brilliant idea.”

As the recent submission of the Startup Visa Act bill suggests, there’s really no shortage of good ideas of leveraging immigration to jumpstart the economy. The challenge is getting the American people to understand that high‐skill immigration creates jobs, that the current system is broken, and that action is required now.

We need an immigration system that prioritizes the attraction and retention of scarce, high‐end talent needed to invent and commercialize alternative energy technology and other emerging technologies.

For more on this, check out the new piece: “Why Immigrants Can Drive the Green Economy: Need for New Policy, Vision and Story Telling” by Robert L. Smith and myself.

http://immigrationpolicy.org/perspectives/why-immigrants-can-drive-green-economy