+1(514) 937-9445 or Toll-free (Canada & US) +1 (888) 947-9445
Hi everyone,
I have just completed Master in business administration from Vancouver. Similarly, I have more than 7 yrs of experience working in bank back in my home country. Talking about Canadian experience, I have 1 year of experience working in retail food store as a general clerk.
My question is am I eligible for PR as my status now is work permit ?
 
Hi everyone,
I have just completed Master in business administration from Vancouver. Similarly, I have more than 7 yrs of experience working in bank back in my home country. Talking about Canadian experience, I have 1 year of experience working in retail food store as a general clerk.
My question is am I eligible for PR as my status now is work permit ?

You don't need a work permit in order to be eligible for EE and some PNPs: https://www.canada.ca/en/immigratio...canada/express-entry/eligibility/compare.html

You should see BC PNP to understand if you are eligible for it.
 
I have heard that for the Australians who have a similar E3 Visa similar to TN, the US government embassy VO checks the deep ties with Australia, often immigrants don't make it

My guess it's because for E3, and virtually any other VISAs, the government actually has time to do checks for deep ties to your home country, in contrast with TN-1's, which are approved/denied on the day you show up at the border, unless the government can do a very detailed probe under a few hours, I think the US government just assumes that you're honest unless proven otherwise.
 
  • Like
Reactions: alexross
My guess it's because for E3, and virtually any other VISAs, the government actually has time to do checks for deep ties to your home country, in contrast with TN-1's, which are approved/denied on the day you show up at the border, unless the government can do a very detailed probe under a few hours, I think the US government just assumes that you're honest unless proven otherwise.
I do not know what really happens in E-3 but I do know that Australia is like .... not having a land border with USA. So if you show up at border after a long flight and then found ineligible due to degree or some mess like that, it will be a ...... bummer I guess? So they check eligibility related stuff before hand at USCIS. Canada is a different ball game altogether. You show up at rainbow bridge or peace arch and be done with it.
 
  • Like
Reactions: alexross
I do not know what really happens in E-3 but I do know that Australia is like .... not having a land border with USA. So if you show up at border after a long flight and then found ineligible due to degree or some mess like that, it will be a ...... bummer I guess? So they check eligibility related stuff before hand at USCIS. Canada is a different ball game altogether. You show up at rainbow bridge or peace arch and be done with it.
My personal experience with America is poor, they grant a visa then still trouble you at the airport or border.
 
I totally understand your point. It would be the same with FSW applicants and PNP also right?
Most FSW and PNP applicants don't live in a dungeon with 50 others or serve food in Tim Hortons.
 
The funny thing is the government is convinced international students are "lucrative" because they bring money in to the Canadian economy. What they don't realize is that money is temporary. Most students from India study on a loan from an Indian bank. When they finish the studies they take a Canadian job (which drives down wages for Canadians) and then instead of spending their earnings inside the Canadian economy, they return the money back to India to pay back the Indian bank with interest. So the money leaves Canada and back to India in a few years. If you think about it, it is actually a net negative for Canada.
There is definitely a good use case to include international students in the PR pipeline to get young applications into the EE pool. However, the perspective that international students are cash cows is beyond ridiculous.

Given the inward remittance stats I see, the money is actually consumed within Canada. The percentage of Indians who land in Canada and send money home are very tiny. Your wrong assumption that money leaves Canada is wrong. These stats are no different for any other nationality on a quick check either. Students are lucrative for bringing in money and for cheap labour. Canadian economy needs quick cash schemes to survive.
 
Given the inward remittance stats I see, the money is actually consumed within Canada. The percentage of Indians who land in Canada and send money home are very tiny. Your wrong assumption that money leaves Canada is wrong. These stats are no different for any other nationality on a quick check either. Students are lucrative for bringing in money and for cheap labour. Canadian economy needs quick cash schemes to survive.

I don't believe those remittance stats capture the loan amounts going back and forth correctly. According to the remittance stats for 2021 money going from India to Canada is only 2.58 million. Even in 2021, there should have been billions of dollars flowing towards Canada from India that students are bringing in. Where is the remittance showing the incoming money international students are bringing in? If it doesn't show students' money coming in to Canada why would it show their money flowing out again?

https://www.statista.com/statistics/1379486/bilateral-remittances-canada/

Also are you suggesting that Indians are not taking loans to study in Canada? Literally every article says students are mortgaging the farms and houses to raise money to study in Canada. Are they not paying those loans back?
 
Last edited:
I don't believe those remittance stats capture the loan amounts going back and forth correctly. According to the remittance stats for 2021 money going from India to Canada is only 2.58 million. Even in 2021, there should have been billions of dollars flowing towards Canada from India that students are bringing in. Where is the remittance showing the incoming money international students are bringing in? If it doesn't show students' money coming in to Canada why would it show their money flowing out again?

https://www.statista.com/statistics/1379486/bilateral-remittances-canada/

Also are you suggesting that Indians are not taking loans to study in Canada? Literally every article says students are mortgaging the farms and houses to raise money to study in Canada. Are they not paying those loans back?

Not debating loans, just debating the remittance number itself. Those loans are $30k-40k and very tiny compared to inward remittances from immigrants that went to other countries. Given the sheer number of immigrants in Canada, remittances shouldn't have been this tiny. It only shows one thing, that Canada brings underperforming immigrants from most countries who usually do anything more than minimum wage jobs.

$30-40k over a lifetime of an immigrant is nothing at the end.
 
  • Like
Reactions: alexross
Not debating loans, just debating the remittance number itself. Those loans are $30k-40k and very tiny compared to inward remittances from immigrants that went to other countries. Given the sheer number of immigrants in Canada, remittances shouldn't have been this tiny. It only shows one thing, that Canada brings underperforming immigrants from most countries who usually do anything more than minimum wage jobs.

$30-40k over a lifetime of an immigrant is nothing at the end.
One of the reasons for low remittances could be the underperforming immigrants like you said. I believe another reason is that in the US, many immigrants are on a temporary visa like an H1b or L1b. They hesitate to buy property there. They typically rent in the US and send back most of their savings to India and buy as much properties in India as they can because they know they will most likely return to India at some point. In Canada, immigrants get the PR quite quickly and buy properties here so there isn't really much need to send money back to India when compared to all the temp workers in the US. This applies to other places like middle east as well where there is almost no scope of permanent residency for Indians.
 
Last edited:
Is the new law about podcasts such a big thing, everyone including musk are blasting JT and Canada, doesn't Canada have bigger fish to fry?
 
  • Like
Reactions: Impatient Dankaroo
Is the new law about podcasts such a big thing, everyone including musk are blasting JT and Canada, doesn't Canada have bigger fish to fry?

That's what I was thinking too. I didn't wanted to read more about it as I spent my weekly news quota on reading the "Nazi" event, anyone knows why is it such a big news? I guess, anything that has to do with voice chat rooms/broadcasts are impacted by this law and that's why Elon Musk is pissed off, but not sure what the actual deal here.
 
Is the new law about podcasts such a big thing, everyone including musk are blasting JT and Canada, doesn't Canada have bigger fish to fry?
He's using the Trump playbook. Basically create another fuck-up so they stop talking about your previous one. Changing the channel. The aim to stop people from talking about the whole Natsi thing.
 
  • Like
Reactions: iSaidGoodDay
Landed back in Canada on a Delhi to Toronto flight, it was full but there were pretty much no one in the citizens/permanent residents queue during exit. I asked a few people and they were either students or work permit holders, some were on closed work permits too. I thought at least half of them would be PR's considering there were many families with children, kind of shocking.
 
Landed back in Canada on a Delhi to Toronto flight, it was full but there were pretty much no one in the citizens/permanent residents queue during exit. I asked a few people and they were either students or work permit holders, some were on closed work permits too. I thought at least half of them would be PR's considering there were many families with children, kind of shocking.
The new underclass
 
  • Like
Reactions: alexross