Studens from India dropped by an additional 44%, following prolonged delays in processing student visas (image source: pexels)
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With federal changes in visa processing, increased vetting, threats on free speech at universities, and a general chilling effect around immigration, new data is showing the impact in one key area: The number of international students that arrived in the U.S. this fall declined 19% since last year, according to a New York Times analysis.
The Times reports how the decline of students from India is especially noteworthy.
Nearly one in three U.S. international students are Indian. The number of international students arriving from India already started to decline last year. But this August, it dropped by an additional 44%, following prolonged delays in processing student visas.
Pew Research Center data indicate there are currently 5.2 million Indian Americans. For the last several years, South Asian Americans were the fastest-growing group within the larger umbrella of Asian Americans — the fastest-growing racial or ethnic population in the United States.
With a decline in the new flow of international students — coupled with stricter H-1B guidelines for some types of workers to contribute here — it’ll be interesting to see how these trends might shape the population trajectory of Indians — and South Asians at large — in the United States in the coming years.
Couple those inbound changes with new questions about America’s outbound soft power. A Canadian author, Stephen Marche, recently questioned whether the U.S. is losing dominance with cultural power abroad, in a Times op-ed:
To many foreign onlookers, it’s increasingly true that America is no longer attractive — either as a cultural ideal or as an aspiration. The country’s narrative has become incoherent, its brand toxic.
“If you have to say you’re hot, you’re not,” Marche writes.
All these immigration changes are increasingly less popular among Asian Americans polled: AAPI Data’s latest AP-NORC Survey finds “more AAPI (Asian American and Pacific Islander) adults disapprove of Trump’s handling of immigration now than six months ago (71% vs. 58%).”
Ingraham: Does that mean the H-1B visa thing will not be a big priority for your administration? Because if you want to raise wages for American workers, you can’t flood the country with tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of foreign workers.
Trump: Look, I agree, but you also do have to bring in talent.
Ingraham: Well, we have plenty of talented people here.
Trump: No, no you don’t. No, you don’t.
Ingraham: We don’t have talented people here?
Trump: No, you don’t have, you don’t have certain talents. And you have to…people have to learn. You can’t take people off like an unemployment line and say, “I’m going to put you into a factory. We’re going to make missiles.”
The views and opinions expressed here are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of India Currents. Any content provided by our bloggers or authors are of their opinion and are not intended to malign any religion, ethnic group, organization, individual or anyone or anything.
Freelance journalist covering race, culture and politics from a South Asian American lens. Co-founder of Red, White and Brown Media.
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