Professors will leave these universities to pursue industry careers, soneven if the job market recovers the universities won't.
Without competent specialized people from the universities, US will lose the tech edge very very quickly. Cutting edge tech requires a large number of people willing to slog through several years of training.
And I highly doubt the kind of universities that rely on tuition revenues from foreign students are ones leading the US's tech edge. The universities that actually matter in this regard will be well-equipped to survive a small setback of less foreign admissions.
H-1B is the primary path for international MS and PhD students to work in the US.
> kind of universities that rely on tuition revenues from foreign students are ones leading the US's tech edgeThat's all universities except community colleges.
>he universities that actually matter in this regard will be well-equipped to survive a small setback of less foreign admissions.
Possible, I'd not bet on it. There is a reason the immigration rules are as they are, and are pretty difficult to overhaul.
That's a significant change in immigration policy that's not covered in 'pause H1B'. I agree in principle that if you align the incentives like this, it would work out.