The traditional narrative that a successful tech career must inevitably lead to Silicon Valley is rapidly losing steam. For years, this assumption has been quietly embedded in the annual ritual of the H-1B visa lottery. Each year, hundreds of thousands of India’s brightest young professionals enter a random draw for the chance to work in a country that has greatly benefited from their talent.
The imminent challenges before us include the exorbitant fees and the terms imposed by some executive order. In September 2025, the Trump administration issued a proclamation that sent shockwaves through India’s professional class by raising the H-1B visa fee to $100,000, a steep increase from the previous range of $2,000 to $5,000. At a stroke, the most-used gateway for for Indian skilled migration to the United States became economically unviable for all but the largest corporations. However, this deeply integrated talent pipeline is increasingly viewed through the lens of a highly asymmetrical power dynamic.
The structural vulnerabilities faced by foreign skilled workers under the H-1B system have drawn comparisons to a modern form of “colonial blackmail”. For three decades, Indians have accounted for nearly 70% of H-1B visas, making them the system’s primary beneficiary. Yet recent US policy shifts, compounded by tariffs and other geopolitical frictions, have now extended uncertainty into this critical domain, placing the $250+ billion Indian IT services sector under strain.
Compounding the pressure are restrictive conditions such as the 60-day grace period granted to laid-off workers to find a new visa-sponsoring employer or face deportation. This framework inherently limits employees’ leverage to negotiate better wages or working conditions, echoing the colonial-era labour extraction framework, where human capital was imported under highly restrictive, legally bound terms.
The real question is how long India should tolerate such bulling? Rather than treating the disruption of the H-1B pathway as a crisis, India should view it as a long-overdue opportunity to diversify its talent pipeline and reduce dependency. This is not the India of 1991, let alone 1947. As the world’s fifth-largest economy with a vibrant domestic tech sector, India now possesses the scale and strategic depth to move beyond a position of reliance.
It is a historic opportunity to be capitalised to the fullest benefit of our nation.
Let’s not forget the fact that we as a sovereign nation tolerated such arrangements since the alternatives at home were inadequate. Successive governments long encouraged exodus of technical talent while doing little to foster a culture of innovation at home. The contrast is telling: while China has surged to top ten in 2025 Global Innovation Index, India remains ranked around 38th.
The current moment demands urgent course correction. The new India must act on it, and act fast in order to get past this imbroglio.
Encouragingly, when one door closes, others open. India was quick enough to negotiate other avenues to support Indian talents with even regions historically viewed as culturally and linguistically distant becoming mainstream destinations. Employers across the globe have stepped up to welcome Indian talent. Israel’s ‘Silicon Wadi’, Russia’s industrial modernisation drive, and streamlined European initiatives such as the EU Blue Card have created new corridors for highly skilled Indian professionals. Ironically, major US tech firms — Google, Amazon, and Microsoft among them — are also accelerating their offshore expansion in Bengaluru and other Indian hubs, particularly in AI and deep tech, making the Indian tech force indispensable.
American restrictionism is not eliminating Indian talent from the global technology driven economy. It is rather relocating that talent back to Indian soil, under Indian skies, within reach of Indian institutions.
Data underscores this shift. H-1B registrations declined from 470,342 in FY 2025 to 343,981 in FY 2026 (a 26.9% drop), and further to 211,600 in FY 2027 (another 38.4% decline). This represents a cumulative drop of roughly 55% over two cycles, driven by higher fees, stricter screening, and wage-based prioritisation.
On the other hand, India’s startup ecosystem, now the world’s third largest with over 100,000 ventures, is steadily filling the gap. Even more significant is the growth of Global Capability Centres (GCCs). India now hosts around 1,700 of them, more than half the global total. These centres are rapidly evolving from back-office operations into genuine hubs of AI research, product development, and innovation.
The infrastructure for a world-class domestic innovation economy is not a distant aspiration. It is being assembled right now, in Hyderabad, Pune, Chennai and Bengaluru, with or without Washington’s permission. This is not a position of weakness. It is leverage. A confident, sovereign India should recognise this reality and engage with the United States and the world on the basis of mutual respect and strategic autonomy without being apologetic, as demonstrated in recent diplomatic exchanges.
The recent visit of the American Secretary of State to India revealed visible signs of India’s firm rebuttal of US hegemony. Rather than appearing as a subordinate partner, India’s rejection of US unilateral actions was visible in lot of diplomatic signalling as a sovereign power, engaging with the United States based on mutual respect and strategic autonomy. Through its assertive diplomatic posture, India made it clear that while cooperation with Washington remains important, it will not compromise its independent foreign policy or national interests under external pressure.
New India does not need to petition the United States for the right to contribute to global technology. It needs to build the conditions under which that contribution is made on Indian terms, generating Indian intellectual property, building Indian institutions, and serving Indian strategic interests.
The H-1B visa was never a gift; it was always a transactional arrangement — and never a fully balanced one. This moment calls for India to respond not with anxiety, but with the assurance of a rising power. The lottery may close, but India need not wait in line.
(Views expressed by the columnist are personal and does not necessarily reflect the opinion or policy of the news portal)

















