I am working in IT around 12 years in Teamcenter, Java, J2EE, C++, C skill sets in India. Is it possible to search job in Canada from India? I am applying for a Canadian PR.
Hi,newtone said:No its not. And most importantly your Indian work experience is not transferable to Canadian work experience and they will not recognize it as Canadian work experience and hence you have to start with no work experience in Canada. Having said that if its that easy to look for a job from India then what will happen to hundreds of thousands of unemployed well qualified Canadians and PR holders already here looking for jobs. Get your PR, bring money from India, spend the money, look for a job, fulfill your quota of job application and rejection, frustration and humiliation. After lot of blood and sweat then maybe you could get an entry level job without benefits and then you can move up gradually. Thats pretty much the system here, if you cant beat it, roll with it.
pixiedust said:Hi,
It was really disappointing to read this. I didn't think that "Canadian Experience" is that much important.."Frustration and humiliation"?!?
My husband and I are both IT professionals and have really good experience here in Turkey. And we are earning good money. It won't be easy to convince my husband to move to Canada under these circumstances
How long does it take to find a job even it's not a very good one?
The ads are not fake but often times company already has someone in mind internally or in the scope of a contract position. They post ads so that company have done their part to advertise for the job legally. Its not a pessimistic message rather a reality check so that you dont get the shock of your life once you are here and then have a really bad impression abour Canada. As a matter of fact we are helping you to condition yourself for what might lie ahead of you. So please dont have any high hopes cause reality is very different from theorypixiedust said:Hi,
Of course I know that it's important but what I meant was if you are experienced enough you might find a low paying but an actual "IT job" eventually.. You're giving really pessimistic messages. I have two friends living in Toronto (one of them is actually an IT professional working in a very big IT company and he was also an immigrant) and they say that it may take a while but it's not impossible as you imply.. By the way I'm already Turkish, and wanna move to Canada. And I'm always googling about job opportunities in Canada and I see lots of search for specialized people. Are you saying that those ads are fake?
pixiedust said:Hi,
Of course I know that it's important but what I meant was if you are experienced enough you might find a low paying but an actual "IT job" eventually.. You're giving really pessimistic messages. I have two friends living in Toronto (one of them is actually an IT professional working in a very big IT company and he was also an immigrant) and they say that it may take a while but it's not impossible as you imply.. By the way I'm already Turkish, and wanna move to Canada. And I'm always googling about job opportunities in Canada and I see lots of search for specialized people. Are you saying that those ads are fake?
Thank you, you are absolutely correct and you are thinking logically, realistically and practically. Unfortunately logically thinking is frowned upon in Canada because it requires effort, as a matter of fact they'll look at you funny if you start talking logically or something that makes sense. Let me give you an example cause I love maths and I love logicpixiedust said:Hmmm.. It was really disappointing to read your comments but I really want to thank you for the information you have given.. It's been an enlightenment..
It seems that it's really a big effort.. We have to think more carefully under the given circumstances..
But isn't it odd that CIO opened up 4000 cap for the IT professionals under the skilled worker program? If job opportunities are that limited why to invite more unemployed people? Doesn't this action put Canadians (or immigrants) who are already unemployed and looking for a job in Canada?
Don't you think that the government would take this kind of an action if they didn't have a plan? I read somewhere that the Canada government plans to make Toronto an IT center for the north America, other than silicon valley etc. Am I just being too optimistic - again??
I think this is oversimplifying it a bit. Not every immigrant is required to bring $10,000 (i.e., family class, refugees, live in caregivers, etc.). The actual number of Skilled Workers is substantially lower than the 250k you mentioned. Further, your math assumes that each immigrant immediately spends all the money that they bring, without having generated any income from within Canada. Finally, your math also fails to account for the costs borne by the state for these immigrants (i.e., Child Tax benefits, schooling, healthcare, public infrastructure, etc.). So, if you actually look at it, the economic impact of, and contribution from, immigrant savings is far less than the $2.5 billion headline figure you mention.newtone said:4. So how much revenue does this bring to Canada $10,000 x 250,000 = $2500000000 ($2.5 billion). Now you want to ask the Prime Minister of Canada "If job opportunities are that limited why to invite more unemployed people?" Here is your answer
I said every immigrant that qualifies under the points system (this obviously excludes refugees, live in caregivers) is required to bring approximately $10,000. Its a law and I didnt create it.torontosm said:I think this is oversimplifying it a bit. Not every immigrant is required to bring $10,000 (i.e., family class, refugees, live in caregivers, etc.). The actual number of Skilled Workers is substantially lower than the 250k you mentioned. Further, your math assumes that each immigrant immediately spends all the money that they bring, without having generated any income from within Canada. Finally, your math also fails to account for the costs borne by the state for these immigrants (i.e., Child Tax benefits, schooling, healthcare, public infrastructure, etc.). So, if you actually look at it, the economic impact of, and contribution from, immigrant savings is far less than the $2.5 billion headline figure you mention.
Fair enough, but then you went on to use the 250k figure that includes all immigrants, not just those who qualify under the points systemnewtone said:I said every immigrant that qualifies under the points system (this obviously excludes refugees, live in caregivers) is required to bring approximately $10,000. Its a law and I didnt create it.
I'm not sure what your point is. If you are working, then you are contributing to the economy and the immigration program works. If you are not working, you are a drain on the economy and the government is not realizing material benefits from your savings anyway.newtone said:You can get maximum Child tax benefit if you are not working. But we all know how hard life is going to be for you and your kid. However if you are working then child tax benefit is very nominal, almost negligent, health care costs are offset by the high taxes you are paying. Have you looked at your paycheck recently? So realistically healthcare is not free. Same with public infrastructure, you are paying a lot of taxes to support that too.