Tesla Inc. (TSLA) CEO Elon Musk is walking a fine line on immigration, calling out abuse of the H1-B visa program while simultaneously defending it as essential to American competitiveness.
The Talent Shortage Reality
Speaking on the "People by WTF" podcast with Nikhil Kamath, co-founder of Zerodha, a leading Indian brokerage, Musk pushed back against the narrative that immigrants are stealing American jobs. "I don't know how real that is… there's always a scarcity of talented people," he said, noting that his companies constantly struggle to find enough skilled workers.
The U.S. has "benefitted immensely" from Indian talent, according to Musk, who emphasized that Tesla, SpaceX, X, and xAI all focus on hiring "the most talented people in the world."
Gaming the System
But Musk wasn't entirely defensive about the program. He acknowledged "some misuse of the H-1B programme," pointing to outsourcing firms that have "gamed the system." He also called out companies that choose H1-B visa holders over U.S. workers simply to gain a cost advantage—a practice that undercuts both American workers and legitimate uses of the program.
Musk also took a shot at the Biden administration's immigration approach, calling it a "free-for-all" with open borders. Still, he cautioned against throwing the baby out with the bathwater: ending the H1-B program altogether "would actually be very bad," he said.
Legal Pressure and Political Shifts
The timing of Musk's comments is notable. Tesla is currently facing a proposed class action lawsuit filed in September that accuses the company of systematically discriminating against American workers by favoring foreign visa holders in hiring and firing decisions.
Meanwhile, the political landscape around H1-B visas continues to shift. In October, tech giants like Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) pledged to keep sponsoring H-1B visas even after President Donald Trump proposed a $100,000 fee on new applications.
Trump himself told Fox News' Laura Ingraham earlier this month that while foreign workers can affect U.S. wages, America still needs to recruit specialized talent because "we don't have certain talents" domestically and Americans need time to learn those skills.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent later backed Trump's position, emphasizing that H-1B visas are designed to bring in skilled foreign experts for short-term training of U.S. workers, not to replace them permanently.
The debate highlights a central tension in immigration policy: how do you protect American workers from exploitation while still attracting the global talent that keeps U.S. companies competitive? Musk's answer seems to be stricter enforcement of existing rules rather than eliminating the program entirely.