Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has described the administration’s “home run” H-1B policy: foreign experts come, “train American workers,” and then “go home.” This clarification puts Donald Trump’s recent “pro-talent” comments into a much stricter, “America First” context.
Bessent insisted the policy is about “knowledge transfer,” not replacement. He outlined a plan to “bring in overseas workers… for three, five, seven years to train the US workers.”
The temporary nature is crucial. “Then they can go home,” Bessent said, “and the US workers will fully take over.” This is a stark departure from H-1B programs viewed as a path to residency.
The policy is a response to a skills gap. “An American can’t have that job, not yet,” Bessent stated, citing a lack of expertise in building ships and semiconductors.
This “home run” is the idea of “overseas partners coming in, teaching American workers, then returning home.” It’s designed to boost the American workforce’s capabilities.
