Regardless, all immigrants are making an investment which total up to $millions which means the govt of Canada is generating revenue ... ground is totally different.
Revenue are a dime a dozen if your costs are more. The world works based on profits. You earn $40K/year, but that is meaningless if your expenses total up to $60K. Every country, every quals program pretty much everywhere charges fees to cover their costs, and Canada is no different.
AlphaFighter said:
Yes, return my friend. If i am paying down a ton of money in terms of immigration fees, fees of acquiring help from immigration consultants, fees regarding medical tests, examinations and other associated costs, costs of travelling to Canada, bringing my life savings into the country...tralia, US and even UK, immigrants get better returns for all their investments, costs, sacrifices compared to Canada.
That cost is peanuts. All of that adds up to less than two weeks of the doctors' bills that you would have to foot if the healthcare was not free. It amounts to less than 4 weeks of the private school education that you were able to deflect because of the free education system. The immigrants are lining up to get in even with the lengthy wait times, so it does not matter what you and I think of the costs: for the immigrants, they matter nada. Zilch as you say. They see plenty of return.
AlphaFighter said:
The US has a population of 300 million people plus, inspite of 9/11 and many other unfortunate incidents it still accepts immigrants from all over the world, even from muslim countries that are on their hit list. Canada in comparison has a meager population of 30 million. I am pretty sure that the total number of immigrants in the US will total up to more than the total number of immigrants in Canada even if the fraction of populations is different.
Willing to testify to that? There is no country for lazymen.
Annual number of immigrants into the US for economic reasons: ~140K
Annual number of immigrants into Canada for economic reasons: ~160K
Economic reasons are those related to employability - i.e skills-based. Most (65%) of the US annual immigrants are on account of family sponsorship and immediate relations (like spouses) and are NOT skills-based.
Source:
https://www.dhs.gov/sites/default/files/publications/ois_yb_2013_0.pdf
AlphaFighter said:
Just because a country is a democracy does not mean that there is no element of Govt control involved or the need for govt control to be involved. In the US this is not needed because the employers have the decency and ethical courtesy to actually embrace diversity in true spirit and accept fore ... fied foreign immigrants, giving proper feedback to foreign immigrants. All these sort of things will go a long way towards helping improve the dramatic under employment situation most qualified foreign immigrants find themselves in.
Canada has exactly the same workplace laws that the US does. Or maybe 95% the same. Practically the same. So, whatever complaints you have against the Canadian system apply equally to the US system. In the US, the per-capita incidence of highly skilled workers is lower (plus the natural workplace movement factors due to its size), which is why it is easier to find some types of jobs in the US. But, there is nothing forcing or preventing an employer to hire or not hire an individual based on their local vs foreign experience in the US. Please provide proof of your alternate theory.
Here is my proof of how the two versions are practically the same but with their 5% differences:
http://www.cwilson.com/resource/new...s-between-canadian-and-us-employment-law.html
AlphaFighter said:
This again is the classic Canadian biased mentality where the impression is given that if foreigners and immigrants are easily accepted into the system economically and socially it will result in lower standards. What exactly is so special about Canadian education and Canadian Work Experience that makes it more high quality compared to lets say American or European education and work experience?
That's one helluva goalpost shift. Previously, you were giving us examples of Pakistani quals becoming irrelevant in Canada. And now we are talking the US quals?
Canadian education system is no better than the US in aggregate. In fact, at the top end of the spectrum, the US education is the best in the world. But, there are hardly any issues encountered by the US-trained immigrants in coming over and settling down in Canada. Here is academic research confirming it:
http://strategy.sauder.ubc.ca/nakamura/Nakamura_Beach_Ed.pdf
Proves the points that if foreign quals are of good enough quality, Canadian companies will line up to hire you.
AlphaFighter said:
It is not a reality in the American, European or Middle Eastern Economy. People can easily re-train while being embraced and given respect for their foreign qualifications, work experiences. ... Again i ask you, what is so special about Canada's education, work experiences, systems that makes it of superior quality compared to the American system, European system, Middle eastern system? Why is that those lucky immigrants who without any Canadian education, work experience, the moment they break into the system end up comfortably outperforming their Canadian counter parts?
First of all, immigration into the Middle East is hardly a comparable here. It is so incredibly easy to move to the Middle East that it stinks. There is hardly any comparison of living standards - unless you are an Arab national. (As a foreigner, you can hardly ever become a national.) Most of the Middle East is not a democracy - entirely the opposite of Canada and the US. Some of the largest human rights issues take place in that part of the world. The Middle Eastern education system is a complete joke. Most of your arguments go down the drain if we switch over to the Middle East. See that?
See my response above for the US education system.
Western Eurpoean education system is at par with North America in aggregate, but exactly how many countries take in how many immigrants per year? I mean, how on earth can you compare, say, Germany (the largest EU economy) with the US and Canada when it takes only a handful of skills-based workers every year? How many of German companies entertain non-German-speaking hires?
AlphaFighter said:
So Pakistani qualified doctors who move to Canada now don't have the experience, specialty and skill set to operate on you?
In Canada and the US, yes, and most of them agree. If they didn't, they would leave in a heartbeat instead of attempting to reposition themselves in Canada. But that's just a snapshot today. These foreign qualified immigrants are also much harder working than the locals, or they would not be in Canada after a life-changing immigration experience. Meaning, if you give them time and the opportunity to learn, they will also become your biggest success stories. (Or their children will.)
AlphaFighter said:
This is what i mentioned, it is one thing for a Canadian to have this attitude but for a Desi to behave more Canadian than Canadian with a fellow Desi is the more serious issue and a classic example of everything that has gone wrong with our Muslim Ummah.
Attitude. Desi. Canadian. Muslim Ummah. One of these days I will be able to squueze more stereotypes in one sentence, but that day is not today.
AlphaFighter said:
What is so special about the Canadian system that North American doctors and UK qualified PHD's are driving taxi's in Toronto?
Please provide proof here for all of us that North American doctors are systematically driving taxis in Canada. Here, I have reserved some space for you:
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AlphaFighter said:
Who are you and the country of Canada to tell these foreign qualified immigrants that there rightful just demands to be respected for their high quality foreign qualifications and work experiences acquired world wide is like demanding a short cut?
Read my post carefully. And slowly. I am Mr Nobody. Just another anonymous internet poster. But I am also the only person actually helping the struggling immigrants by not leading them down the garden path of foreign quals = instant job.
Like I said, no country for lazymen!
AlphaFighter said:
Actually people have filed several petitions in courts, human rights organizations and there is some work being done about this...
I'm sure we can find a random article or activist offering token frustration-driven activism as an excuse for procrastination. Look what I found:
http://www.danielpipes.org/comments/195861/
But - then - I look at what most of the world leaders agree with - such as:
http://www.jihadwatch.org/2014/09/o...will-be-at-war-with-islam-islam-teaches-peace
So, in response to your links, I offer the following account of how the world views Canada:
http://www.vancitybuzz.com/2015/11/canada-named-worlds-most-tolerant-country/
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2014/08/19/best-place-to-live_n_5691413.html
http://globalnews.ca/news/2405032/canada-9th-best-country-to-live-in-un-human-development-index/