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ElaKiri Talk!
Canada vs Germany
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<blockquote data-quote="me2cool" data-source="post: 26439633" data-attributes="member: 396331"><p>Both great in terms of family benefits.</p><p>You have universal health care for the whole family. Say in a country like US, this could get very ugly very quickly, especially, unless your employer provides cover for the whole family. Depending on your field/expertise, both countries have good job opportunities </p><p></p><p>Germany also has "free" education. (free=publicly funded by people's tax money) from Kindergarten to PhD.</p><p>Canada, I don't think it's free but probably heavily subsidized for citizens/PR holders. </p><p></p><p>Location of Germany is in the heart of Europe, which gives you easy access to all other European countries and Alps.</p><p>Canada is one shitty, cold location in a corner of the world. If you want to travel back and forth to Sri Lanka often, this could get very expensive from Canada. Also not everyone enjoys Canadian winter. </p><p></p><p>Canada speaks English for most part (except for Quebec).</p><p>Germany speaks German. Living there, finding a job is bit harder (and sometimes impossible) if you only speak English. However, this depends on your field of expertise. (e.g. IT/Eng job opportunities exist without German language skills)</p><p></p><p>If you move with the express entry program, you can get the citizenship in minimum 3 years in Canada</p><p>In Germany, if you move there with a job or for studies, you can get the PR in few years. (exact number of years depends on your visa). </p><p>However, citizenship could take up to 8 years. Plus, you need to speak B2 German to get it.</p><p></p><p>Both countries have strong economies and they practice something in between the capitalism and the socialism. In both countries, you will pay about 30-45% as tax from your salary. So take that into account when you read a job offer. </p><p></p><p>Canada is probably more immigrant friendly (still) than Germany. Germans, in general, are very cold. You can't start friendships that easily.</p><p></p><p>Once you are a Canadian citizen, you have opportunities to move to the US and work there. The process becomes simpler. </p><p>Once you are a German citizen, you can basically work across the entire EU (with few exceptions like UK) without any regulations/visa.</p><p></p><p>It's a personal decision based on your needs <img src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7" class="smilie smilie--sprite smilie--sprite2" alt=";-)" title="Wink ;-)" loading="lazy" data-shortname=";-)" /></p><p></p><p>Edited with some more details</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="me2cool, post: 26439633, member: 396331"] Both great in terms of family benefits. You have universal health care for the whole family. Say in a country like US, this could get very ugly very quickly, especially, unless your employer provides cover for the whole family. Depending on your field/expertise, both countries have good job opportunities Germany also has "free" education. (free=publicly funded by people's tax money) from Kindergarten to PhD. Canada, I don't think it's free but probably heavily subsidized for citizens/PR holders. Location of Germany is in the heart of Europe, which gives you easy access to all other European countries and Alps. Canada is one shitty, cold location in a corner of the world. If you want to travel back and forth to Sri Lanka often, this could get very expensive from Canada. Also not everyone enjoys Canadian winter. Canada speaks English for most part (except for Quebec). Germany speaks German. Living there, finding a job is bit harder (and sometimes impossible) if you only speak English. However, this depends on your field of expertise. (e.g. IT/Eng job opportunities exist without German language skills) If you move with the express entry program, you can get the citizenship in minimum 3 years in Canada In Germany, if you move there with a job or for studies, you can get the PR in few years. (exact number of years depends on your visa). However, citizenship could take up to 8 years. Plus, you need to speak B2 German to get it. Both countries have strong economies and they practice something in between the capitalism and the socialism. In both countries, you will pay about 30-45% as tax from your salary. So take that into account when you read a job offer. Canada is probably more immigrant friendly (still) than Germany. Germans, in general, are very cold. You can't start friendships that easily. Once you are a Canadian citizen, you have opportunities to move to the US and work there. The process becomes simpler. Once you are a German citizen, you can basically work across the entire EU (with few exceptions like UK) without any regulations/visa. It's a personal decision based on your needs ;-) Edited with some more details [/QUOTE]
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