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Can Canadian bartenders immigrate?

Some of my friends have emigrated to Australia or are applying. I have been there several times on my own business trip, so I have a say. Australia is neither heaven nor hell. In particular, it is very difficult for domestic direct immigration overseas. I studied and worked in America for six years before I really understood and spoke. I can understand 80% of the meaning by watching TV movies, and the remaining 20% of the cultural and historical connotations may never be understood, because I didn't grow up watching these TV dramas. It is not difficult to find a professional job in Australia if you pass the language test. I know a man who immigrated to Australia from the United States like me and found a professional job before he arrived. It is never easy for a 30-year-old to start a life in another country. If you earn a lot in China, try to delay the landing time and try to save money and bring it to Australia. Use domestic time to prepare language and culture, and prepare other aspects of life through the internet. Because there are too many things to adapt to when I arrive in Australia, I try to resign as late as possible. Different cities have their own official website. The information obtained from the official website is accurate, so you can practice your English. Many people here think that mentality is very important, and I think the purpose of immigration is more important. If possible, travel to Australia or make a short visit before making a decision. Don't worry about money. You are making an important decision for your family. Even with a kangaroo passport, do you have the heart to let your child run back and forth? Can I get back the seat I gave up in China? My purpose is clear. My parents want to retire in Australia. After getting an Australian passport, if Australia develops well, I will stay. If not, I will go back to the United States or China. I think China may encounter a big hurdle in the next few years, so I think I must arrange an overseas retreat for myself and my parents. Of course, I am optimistic about China for a long time, but human life is limited, and even ten years of twists and turns are unbearable for me, although ten years is a short moment in the long river of history. Domestic immigrants have an illusion that life in Australia is suitable and Australians are lazy. My own Australian colleagues are also working overtime on weekends. Of course, they also belong to the middle and high salary class. The pace of life in Australia may be slower than that in China, but if you want to enter the high-paying class, you will only pay more than China in the first few years. Australia also has intrigues, although it is much better than China. However, as long as there is interest competition, office politics is inevitable. As for welfare, unless it is my parents' age, I doubt whether the current welfare level in Australia can be maintained. Australia's welfare level is much higher than that of the United States. Twenty years ago, the welfare level in the United States was also very high. Later, due to the aging population, there were too many immigrants from the third world and welfare was cut. Today, social security and medical insurance are on the verge of collapse. I wouldn't be surprised if Australia follows the old path of the United States in 20 years. Therefore, immigrants are a little eager for a sword for welfare. Moreover, many welfare properties in Australia cannot be enjoyed if they exceed a certain amount. We always want to be a group with excess property. Australia's overall environment, such as the rule of law, nature, climate and humanities education, is better than China's, but if it falls from the upper middle class in China to the lower class in this country, there is no hope, and the psychological gap will be unbearable. Canada is full of such domestic immigrants who complain bitterly, and they also have the most serious impact on the domestic turtle market, because the wave of China immigrants who directly immigrated to Canada began in the mid-1990s, and the number of China immigrants in Canada has been ranked first since the end of the 1990s, while China immigrants in Australia did not surpass Britain for the first time until 2004. No matter how good the outside environment is, your little environment is not good and your mood will not be much better. If you don't value yourself in China and have a house and a car in China, I suggest that you save at least 30% in the first phase of buying a house in Australia before emigrating, so the psychological pressure is not so great. I have been to some websites of Australian British immigrants, and their economic situation is completely different. Many people belonging to the lower middle class in Britain immigrated to Australia. People who could only live in a small house in the middle and lower reaches of London can buy a house in a good location in Melbourne without a loan and be promoted to the upper middle class in Australia immediately. Such immigrants have few regrets. China people tend to emigrate from the bottom, except for corrupt officials at home. Therefore, we must be more cautious. We can think that the process of immigration is a little more difficult, and there is nothing wrong with thinking that the environment is a little worse. Everyone knows that Australia has a good welfare, but the wool comes from sheep, and the price is high tax rate. I worked in China for a year, and I saw that many high salaries were gray income that didn't depend on taxes, and tax evasion was also very serious. Whoever pays taxes honestly is a fool. However, the biggest feature of western developed countries is not democracy, but ubiquity and high efficiency, and we must never offend the tax bureau that cannot cheat. The following is the personal tax rate calculator on the official website of the Australian Taxation Bureau. You can fill in some simple hypothetical data to see how much psychological burden you can bear to pay this tax rate. In terms of job hunting, there are many occupations in between in foreign countries besides blue-collar and white-collar workers, and these occupations in between are just places that China people don't understand and have certain opportunities. A few days ago, Australia had a rich list. Just look at the occupations these people are engaged in and you will know where the opportunities are: most of them are real estate development, because Australia is still a country with a short history and has yet to be developed. About one third of them are in the entertainment media, and none of them are in the high-tech industry. This shows from the side that Australia is not the golden land of IT industry, and China immigrants account for more than half, so their disappointment can be imagined. I feel that the biggest difference between living abroad and your career in China is that no matter what your age, you are likely to change careers and have a high success rate, because there are many government-subsidized adult education abroad to help you get re-employed. So I think besides I really like it, I should be mentally prepared to re-receive education and change careers when I immigrate. However, you have to ask yourself, are you willing to move to an industry that you may not like all your life for the purpose of immigration, an industry that is not worth facing in the traditional concept of China people? Ideas cannot be changed overnight. The saddest thing in the world is your own level. What industry should I transfer to? China people's thinking is limited to blue-collar jobs if they are not white-collar. In fact, there are many industries that can be considered besides this strict regulation. For example, the United States, Canada and Australia have always had a high demand for chefs (western chefs, pastry makers) and bartenders. Because of the fierce competition among Chinese people, China chefs are much worse than western chefs. Real estate agents, mortgage loan officers, nurses, auto repair, tour guides, beauticians and so on all belong to this category. Here is an official job search website. You can see the job demand distribution of the industry according to your favorite places, and also help you decide where your industry is. Lots of opportunities. For new immigrants, it is more realistic to choose a place according to job opportunities. Australia's pillar industries have always been real estate, tourism and resource development, so as long as you can find your own position in these industries, at least you won't have to worry about the rice bowl in the future. As we all know, houses in Australia are very expensive now, and wages and house prices are slightly better than those in Shanghai. The obvious advantage is that there is land property right, which can be passed on to children in the future, but the obvious disadvantage is that there are few new houses and they are very expensive. In China, buying a house is the concept of a first-hand house. Foreign first-hand houses are either in newly developed areas with inconvenient transportation or beyond their affordability. I have seen many people think that houses in Australia will fall sharply, but I hold the opposite opinion. Australia's population is concentrated in several cities not because they are in a panic, but because most of the land in central Australia is seriously short of water and unfit for human habitation. Therefore, regardless of Australian natives or new immigrants, there are not many areas to choose from, and the housing demand is concentrated. Among the new immigrants in Australia, Britain and New Zealand account for 34% of the total number of immigrants (ABS data of 20065438+0). They all buy houses with money, especially those British immigrants whose properties are extremely expensive. They are the chief culprits of real estate speculation. No matter how expensive the house in Sydney is, it will show its value compared with that in London. Moreover, the immigration trend in recent years has also increased a lot of people (like me) who failed to get a green card after 9 1 1 in the United States. Mostly Indians. They have worked abroad for some time and have a certain deposit. Judging from the local wages in Australia, there is a bubble in Australia's real estate. However, considering that many immigrants have considerable deposits as down payment, they can even pay them off in one lump sum. Although the houses in Sydney are a little expensive, the decline will not be great. Assuming that the number of houses in Sydney will drop by at most 30% in the future (I think this is a credible range), do you think you can afford it and realize your Australian dream? If the Australian dollar falls, Australian real estate is an affordable price for international immigrants, and there is even less room for decline. Another point that is more difficult for domestic immigrants to accept is the price of some products in Australia. I stayed in Sydney for a weekend to check the price, and I felt that the ordinary supermarket was ok. The price of the weekend farmers' market is about half cheaper than that of the supermarket, and the quality is very good. But in terms of electrical appliances, electronic products and ordinary textiles, even in terms of local wages, they are very expensive. Therefore, the prices of electronic products and electrical appliances in Australia are 30-50% more expensive than those in the United States, but the wages in the United States are generally much higher than those in Australia. Not only that, because the Australian market is relatively small and the competition is not fierce, you can't buy the latest electronic products at all. Mobile phone charges, broadband charges and telephone charges are more depressing than those in China or the United States. For big items, the absolute price of furniture with the same quality is not much different from that in China, while the price advantage of cars is obvious. There are two kinds of domestic direct immigrants to Australia, which can fully grasp the improvement of quality of life. One is that it is really difficult to see the future of old-age care in China; On the other hand, if you have reached more than10 million assets in China and come to Australia to retire, you will have to spend more money to live the same high-quality life at home as abroad. Look at the golf membership fee, and you will know the price of luxury car villa. The more expensive things are, the cheaper they are abroad. However, the first category usually can't get immigration qualification and can't enter Australia, and the second category doesn't come here to discuss it, so it was put into action early. Most of them are more than enough, and the cost of immigration is high, and the return of immigration is unstable. So I write these things in the hope of giving some negative and true information, because there are many positive information in the intermediary, so I don't need to repeat it. Finally, try to be honest when applying, not for the Australian government, but for yourself.