Donald Trump’s recent interview comments, where he advocated for bringing skilled immigrants into the US, sent ripples through the political landscape. His statement that “you don’t have certain talents” and that “people have to learn” seemed to signal a significant departure from his administration’s previous hardline on H-1B visas, suggesting a new openness to foreign expertise.
This interpretation, however, has been quickly shut down by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who provided a critical clarification. According to Bessent, the president wasn’t signaling a softer stance, but rather outlining a new, highly specific strategy focused on “knowledge transfer.” The goal is not to import a foreign workforce, but to import temporary foreign trainers.
Bessent explicitly laid out the new framework. “I think the president’s vision here is to bring in overseas workers who have the skills for three, five, seven years to train the US workers,” he said. This temporary arrangement has a clear endgame: “Then they can go home, and the US workers will fully take over.” This redefines the H-1B visa from a work permit to a temporary teaching contract.
The driving force behind this policy is a stark admission of a skills gap in key American industries. Bessent noted that the US has not “built ships… for years” and has fallen behind in semiconductor manufacturing. As a result, he stated bluntly, “An American can’t have that job, not yet.” The foreign experts are needed to bridge this gap in expertise.
Bessent is promoting this “train and return” model as a “home run” for the American economy. It avoids the political fallout of replacing American workers while simultaneously solving the critical skills deficit. The plan envisions “overseas partners” acting as instructors, and upon their departure, leaving a more capable and self-sufficient American workforce in their wake.