Raising Fees Won't Fix the Visa Process
The problem is the immigration process itself, not a lack of funding.

In May 2020, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), the agency within the Department of Homeland Security that processes visa and naturalization applications, warned Congress that it was on the brink of serious budget trouble. The agency is funded almost entirely by the fees it collects from applicants, which plummeted under the Trump administration.
With legal migration and naturalizations now inching toward pre-pandemic levels, USCIS has proposed solving its cash problems by hiking fees for nearly every category of immigrant. USCIS Director Ur M. Jaddou said the fee increases would help improve the agency's "customer service operations" and manage "the incoming workload." But the agency's proposal ignores the reality that its dysfunction is a result of bureaucratic bloat, not lack of revenue.
USCIS wants to drastically increase fees for family-based and employment-based visas. Employers hiring high-skilled workers on H-1B visas would have to pay 70 percent more. The application fees for one kind of investment visa would rise from $3,675 to $11,160. The cost of filing all the forms needed to gain permanent resident status in the U.S. would increase from $1,225 to $2,820. If the changes are finalized, according to Bloomberg Law, they "would represent a weighted average increase of 40% across the board."
But processing times have "nothing to do with money," David Bier, associate director of immigration studies at the Cato Institute, wrote in a January 2023 report. Bier noted that "the average of the median processing times across all forms for which [USCIS] reports data increased threefold" between 2012 and 2022, from less than four months to more than a year.
The agency's immigration forms have ballooned from a total of 193 pages in 2003 to 701 in 2022, according to a Cato analysis. The length of almost every form increased during that period. The result is longer processing times, which contribute to an ever-growing application backlog. It will take about 10 million man-hours for USCIS adjudicators to work through that backlog.
USCIS says the new fee structure would help it hire about 8,000 new workers to process applications. It should instead address why those applications are taking so long to process. Upping the cost of applying for legal status while increasing the paperwork burden is apt to deprive the U.S. of talented foreigners.
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Do the VISA forms include ESG and DEI?
In reality we should be paying foreigners to come here and stay./s
The agency is funded almost entirely by the fees it collects from applicants, which plummeted under the Trump administration.
Hmmm.... did a global pandemic cause it or was it Trumps idea?
Come on! This is Reason. She wouldn't get her gold star for the day if she didn't dump on Trump.
How in the hell does a crack down on Illegal Aliens cause a decline in Legal Aliens?
Is Reason trying to be MSNBC?
We should be massively hiking the fees we pay to illegal immigrants in order to get more of them. And fuck the INS, nobody should require a visa to enter the US and stay as long as they want. Nor a passport, a driver's license or any sort of ID or background check. The wheeziest, coughingest Muslim goatherder from Jalabad ought to be able to bring his flock of diseased goats and his RPG-27's directly to New York, no questions asked. Anything less is a human rights violation Hitler himself would blush to impose.
Your Masters Degree in Fiona Immigration Policy is paying off.
If these immigrants are such special people who will be nothing but positive to the USA shouldn't they be able to pay a little more in fees?
Isn't it amazing that even with all that time and money they still do a piss poor job at separating the criminal looters from honorable earners....
The immigration process is fine: it’s a pretty reasonable, quite generous and open system for legal immigration.
The problem is that the immigration system is clogged up by illegal migrants and fake asylum seekers. They are what’s driving up the cost, and they are creating the long wait times for legal immigrants. And Reason is cheering on this dysfunction.
Start enforcing immigration law as written and intended, against both migrants and employers. Start rejecting people with no valid asylum claim. Start punishing and then deporting illegal border crossers. Start doing that, and the costs and wait times will go down.
Speaking as an immigrant myself, that is.
Oh, and speaking as a legal immigrant myself, if $11000 is a problem for you with an investment visa, you don't meet the necessary criteria. Ditto if you can't pay $3000 for your green card.
five letters shows USCIS more important.
>>which plummeted under the Trump administration.
not because nobody could travel internationally for reasons
Probably because the system is so clogged across the board with a record number of illegal immigrants aka economic migrants posing as asylum seekers. But the Biden administration wouldn’t publicly admit that, and Reason wouldn’t like to hear it.
Anyway, isn’t this simply supply and demand, what the free market is all about? When the supply is low and demand is high, prices increase. That’s the way it works.
There is simply no end to this demand, nor any reasonable way of meeting that demand. There are literally billions of people in the world who would like to come to the United States. Even if every single person in our 320 million population was working on their visas, it wouldn’t be enough people to clear that backlog.
This is not "simply supply and demand" - it's government bureaucrats restricting the free movement of people.
Their job is to restrict it more and punish those who violate our laws.
They aren't doing their job.
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