Congress spokesperson Manish Tewari said the decision of the Donald Trump administration to tighten the rules of the H-1B visa programme was "disappointing" as India was its biggest beneficiary.
He rued that various countries were disinclined towards globalisation of labour even though they wanted globalisation of capital.
"The silence of this government has been absolutely deafening and we do hope that this government realises that young Indians are not forgiving to those who do not honour their promises and complete it.
Tewari said the Trump Administration's decision to drastically scale back on H1B Visa programme and the Australian government's move to scrap the 457 temporary Work Visa is "extremely disappointing".
"But what is even more disappointing is the fact that the NDA government, which had made tall promises to young Indians in the 2014 election campaign, has completely failed to work with both the American and the Australian governments to try and convey to them the Indian point of view," he said.
"So, therefore, these barriers to entry which are going up while you want to have globalisation of capital, globalisation of labour is something which should have been rigorously taken up by the current government," he said.
The Congress leader said India needed to create about 350 million jobs to meet the flow of about a million young Indians who join the employment stream every year, but the NDA government has so far created only 4.4 lakh jobs in the last two years.
He also cited a World Bank report that says that 69 per cent of all manufacturing jobs in India are threatened by automation and robotisation.
"Here is the Prime Minister talking about Make-in-India. With empirical statistics put out by the World Bank, to rather than Make-in-India adding jobs, there is a possibility that 69 per cent of the jobs in the manufacturing sector over the next one decade will be lost to automation," he said.
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