Job Recruitment Website - Ranking of immigration countries - Which is better, the EU green card or the US green card? Is there any good way? Do the EU and the US exempt each other from visas?

Which is better, the EU green card or the US green card? Is there any good way? Do the EU and the US exempt each other from visas?

Basically, it is difficult to compare which is better, and we should judge according to our own needs. Personally, I can only answer what I know better, so I can tell you something about the EU green card.

EU green card, that is, permanent residence, means that after you get a green card of an EU country, you can enter and leave a country without restrictions and stay indefinitely.

But this green card also depends on where you take it, where you take it, where you live for a long time, and which country's welfare policy you follow.

For example. For example, if you have a Danish green card and live in Denmark, then your welfare benefits will follow the Danish welfare policy. The welfare treatment in northern Europe is relatively high internationally. Specifically, if you have legal status (this is not a green card, even if it is only a visa), you can enjoy the treatment of free hospitalization in public hospitals. But if it's a minor illness, you have to pay to go to the drugstore to get the medicine yourself. There are also some exceptional diseases that need to be charged, such as seeing a psychologist or getting some vaccines. Children of residents with green cards are free to study, and if the children are born locally and are younger, the government will give them subsidies every month, ranging from 1000 to several thousand per month according to their age. If you are unemployed, you can also receive unemployment benefits from the government according to different situations. When children grow up, they start to attend junior high school, and the government also gives them education subsidies every month, commonly known as Sue. Moreover, the wage standard in Nordic countries is generally high, and the statutory wage is calculated by the hour, which is not less than 100 Danish kroner per hour. (This refers to the statutory wage. Chinese restaurants and the like can certainly not meet this standard, but 7,000 or 8,000 Danish kroner per month can be guaranteed. Generally, the working hours are 7 or 8 hours a day, with one day off every week. However, the consumption in Europe is not too outrageous, except for the expensive transportation, everything else is fine. So generally speaking, as long as you are willing to work, you can support yourself.

But taxes in Europe are very high and strict. If you are not a student and don't have a high tax allowance, then ordinary residents only have a tax allowance of more than 40 thousand yuan a year, and you have to pay 8% basic social insurance. If it exceeds this 40,000 yuan, you basically need to pay 8% basic insurance +37% national tax plus local tax, which is 45%. After your salary is paid, it will be cut in half directly. But the pre-tax wages in northern Europe are very high, so even if the tax is reduced, there is nothing to worry about. And if you pay taxes, if you have any problems, the government will take care of you.

In a word, Europe is a humane place with good welfare, and what happens is generally solved from a humanitarian point of view. But it is not easy to get a green card in Europe because it is not an immigrant country. Denmark's latest policy is to live legally for more than 5 years and pay certain taxes through a certain level of Danish.

I will get my identity in five years. It depends on whether you sign a student, a job or a wedding. However, it is not easy to get a European work visa unless you are a particularly popular major. Students have to pay tuition every year. Marriage ... depends on personal nature. - -

The EU's green card is visa-free, but as far as I know, it is not visa-free with the United States. With the EU green card, you can freely enter and leave the Schengen area of the EU. As long as there are reasonable reasons (such as looking for a job and issuing a certificate), you can apply for local legal identity and start legal work, study and life within three months. So many people get green cards from some small countries in the European Union and go to work and live in countries with high welfare like Northern Europe.

I don't really know much about the American green card here. Another friend told me that the green card in the United States is not so popular now, mainly because the employment situation is not very optimistic, the tax is much lower than that in Europe, but the welfare benefits are weak.