Temporary work visa programs grew 13% under Trump: Estimated number of temporary migrant workers employed in the United States, 2016 and 2019

Number of workers employed
Nonimmigrant visa classification 2016 2019
A-3 visa for attendants, servants, or personal employees of A-1 and A-2 visa holders 2,162 1,687
B-1 visa for temporary visitors for business 3,000 3,000
CW-1 visa for transitional workers on the Commonwealth of Northern Mariana Islands 8,093 3,263
F-1 visa for foreign students, Optional Practical Training program (OPT) and STEM OPT extensions 199,031 223,308
G-5 visa for attendants, servants, or personal employees of G-1 through G-4 visa holder 1,309 945
E-1 visa for treaty traders and their spouses and children 8,085 6,668
E-2 visa for treaty investors and their spouses and children 66,738 66,738
E-3 visa for Australian specialty occupation professionals 15,628 16,858
H-1B visa for specialty occupations 528,993 583,420
H-2A visa for seasonal agricultural occupations 134,368 204,801
H-2B visa for seasonal nonagricultural occupations 149,491 160,410
H-4 visa for spouses of certain H-1B workers 54,936 74,749
J-1 visa for Exchange Visitor Program participants/workers 193,520 222,597
J-2 visa for spouses of J-1 exchange visitors 10,147 11,781
L-1 visa for intracompany transferees 316,224 337,164
L-2  visa for spouses of intracompany transferees 25,670 25,673
O-1/O-2 visa for persons with extraordinary ability and their assistants 38,706 47,725
P-1 visa for internationally recognized athletes and members of entertainment groups 24,262 25,601
P-2 visa for artists or entertainers in a reciprocal exchange program 97 107
P-3 visa for artists or entertainers in a reciprocal exchange program 8,426 9,848
TN visa or status for Canadian and Mexican nationals in certain professional occupations under NAFTA 50,000 50,000
Total 1,838,886 2,076,343

Notes: Methodology for calculating the number of workers derived from Daniel Costa and Jennifer Rosenbaum, Temporary Foreign Workers by the Numbers: New Estimates by Visa Classification, Economic Policy Institute, March 2017. All references to a particular year should be understood to mean the U.S. government’s fiscal year (Oct. 1–Sept. 30).

Sources

Bureau of Consular Affairs, “Nonimmigrant Visa Statistics,” U.S. Department of State; USCIS, “Form I-765 Application for Employment Authorization, All Receipts, Approvals, Denials Grouped by Eligibility Category and Filing Type, Fiscal Year 2019”; H-1B Authorized-to-Work Population Estimate, Office of Policy and Strategy, Research Division, June 2020; Daniel Costa and Jennifer Rosenbaum, Temporary Foreign Workers by the Numbers: New Estimates by Visa Classification, Economic Policy Institute, March 2017; Letter from Sen. Grassley to Attorney General Lynch and Secretaries Johnson, Kerry, and Perez, June 7, 2016; U.S. Government Accountability Office, Nonimmigrant Investors: Actions Needed to Improve E-2 Visa Adjudication and Fraud Coordination, GAO-19-577, July 2019; Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates, “J-1 Physicians: Essential to U.S. Health Care” (infographic), Oct. 9, 2020.

View the underlying data on epi.org.