“Americans Can’t Have That Job Yet”: The Hard Reality Behind the New H-1B Proposal

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A stark reality check regarding the capability of the American workforce has been issued by the highest levels of the US government, serving as the justification for a revamped H-1B visa policy. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has moved to clarify the administration’s position following President Trump’s comments on the necessity of importing skilled labor. Bessent’s clarification centers on the uncomfortable premise that for certain high-tech and heavy industrial roles, American workers are currently unqualified. He bluntly stated in an interview that “an American can’t have that job, not yet,” attributing this deficiency to a prolonged period of industrial stagnation in sectors like shipbuilding and microchip production. This admission serves as the bedrock for a policy that seeks to bring in foreign workers not to fill seats, but to fill a knowledge gap.
The proposed solution, as articulated by Bessent, is a rigorous program of “knowledge transfer” that strictly limits the tenure of foreign experts. The administration is proposing a visa structure that permits skilled workers to enter the United States for a fixed duration—cited as three to seven years—with the explicit mandate to train the local workforce. The narrative suggests a transactional relationship: the US gains the technical know-how required to revitalize its defense and manufacturing bases, and in exchange, foreign workers gain temporary employment. However, the endgame is clear: once the skills are transferred and the American worker is trained, the foreign expert is expected to return to their home country, leaving a self-sufficient domestic workforce in their wake.
This policy perspective aligns with, and explains, President Trump’s recent refusal to agree that America has sufficient domestic talent. During his own interview, Trump dismantled the idea that the US can simply hire from within for all positions, repeatedly asserting, “No, you don’t have certain talents.” He argued that placing long-term unemployed individuals into highly technical roles without proper training is not feasible. By acknowledging that “people have to learn,” Trump set the stage for Bessent’s follow-up, which positions foreign labor as the necessary educational catalyst to bridge the gap between the current state of the US workforce and the administration’s industrial ambitions.
The focus on specific industries such as semiconductors and shipbuilding highlights the strategic nature of this immigration policy. These are not merely commercial sectors but pillars of national security and economic independence. The administration’s argument is that the “muscle memory” for these trades has been lost in America due to decades of outsourcing. Therefore, the reintroduction of foreign skilled workers is painted not as a betrayal of the “America First” doctrine, but as a prerequisite for its success. Bessent’s characterization of this cycle—import, train, repatriate—as a “home run” indicates a belief that this is the only viable path to re-industrialization without permanently altering the demographic or labor composition of the country.
However, this “train-to-replace” model introduces a complex dynamic into the global talent market. It assumes that the world’s best engineers and shipbuilders will be willing to uproot their lives for a job that explicitly promises their eventual replacement and repatriation. While the policy aims to prioritize the long-term dominance of the US worker, it fundamentally changes the value proposition of the H-1B visa, turning it from a potential path to the American Dream into a temporary consulting gig. Whether this will attract the “best and brightest” that Trump claims to want remains an open question, but the administration’s stance is clear: foreign talent is a temporary tool for American restoration, not a permanent fixture.

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