American Renaissance 10/28/2025 3:55:56 PM
 

India’s government is drafting a bill to expand and accelerate the already huge migration of Indians into jobs throughout the developed world, including white collar careers in the Fortune 500.

The “Overseas Mobility Bill” will help the Indian government train its young people amid recommendations from foreign companies, negotiate labor deals with foreign governments, and help bind overseas Indians to their home countries, according to the English-language Deccan Herald newspaper, which adds:

[Training] young Indians in the future of jobs overseas, negotiating better working conditions for [Indian] workers, and opening new pathways for [Indian] migration will be crucial. The law should empower young Indian migrants to strengthen their leverage and promote their image in destination countries.

The law will include an “Overseas Placement Agency regime, mandatory eMigrate registration for Indians traveling abroad, competitive recruitment processes … and establishing [the Indian city of] Mumbai as a global mobility hub, ” said an association of Indian migrant groups.

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Similarly, India’s government announced its opposition to Trump’s potentially important $100,000 fee on arriving H-1B workers in 2026. {snip}

Since 2000, the Indian population in the United States has zoomed upwards from a few hundred thousand people to roughly 5 million migrants, largely because of the technology sector’s mass-hiring of Indian visa workers, such as L-1 and H-1B workers. This huge legal inflow has attracted a massive illegal inflow, and has pushed millions of American tech experts out of jobs and many out of the middle class.

India’s economic strategy is built on exporting migrants, who then send vast remittances — and increasingly — outsourced jobs, corporate investments, sensitive private data, and novel technology back to India. The Deccan Herald reported:

India’s diaspora of almost 36 million people is the largest globally. While 19 million have adopted foreign nationality, and 17 million are Non-Resident Indians (NRIs). In the 21st century, India emerged as the largest source country for migration. They include professionals, workers and students who inhabit almost all countries. Indians constitute just 6 per cent of the global migrant community, but the country’s youthful demography could contribute more migrants through the 21st century.

India has already signed “Labor Mobility” deals to export more Indians to countries such as Australia, the United Kingdom, Israel, Germany, and Japan. {snip}

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