Originally posted by bluedrop
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IT contracts in Canada
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Originally posted by unixman View PostThis might also be noticed by anyone moving to the North of England.
In Canada, I have noticed that the salary does not differ so much from city to city. Senior IT roles in Toronto pay around 120k CAD pretty much the same in Calgary. However, houses are much cheaper to rent out or purchase in Calgary compared to Toronto.Comment
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Originally posted by greypanda View PostNorth of England especially Yorkshire Dales is very beautiful and houses are affordable. However there are no contract roles out there and permanent salary compared to London is very less.
My last perm job in Leeds was £65k, 2009/10 - I only lasted a year, fell out with boss and walked. Scottish tw@t....
So think again, sonny.Last edited by stek; 14 January 2018, 20:11.Comment
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Originally posted by mall View PostI contracted in Canada on a PR. Was based in Vancouver. Job market is very different out there. Contracting is seen more as a temporary thing until you find a perm job.
As everyone out there does a tax return. Unlike our PAYE.
And Canadians prefer to meet face to face. So expect to network alot to land a role.
As for what you can earn that depends on your skills and experience.
Canada is a big country and you have to look at each province, Almost as seperate countries. What goes in BC will be very different to Ontario.
You can incorporate provincially or federally. And taxes are calculated seperately for both.
Out there it is known that the main places to work are Toronto Vancouver, Calgary, Ottawa and Montreal.
And there was a saying "Canada is one of the biggest countries in the world and everyone lives in 5% of it!!'
Cost of living is dificult to compare to the UK.
But Food, insurance, property tax and health care costs more.
Comparing a new prefab house on the outskirts of calgary to a house in Surrey England is not a fair one.
You also have to compare costs of living based on what you can earn. Not as a tourist.
You also have to seriously look at the climate.
Calgary is cold in winter.I was driving to work in April and was listening to the weather for west canada and it said Calgary highs of -10c
We enjoyed our time in Canada but decided it was not going to work for us long term.
Oh also houses might look massive. When infact people rent out floors to help pay the bills. They are called duplexes or even fourplexes.Comment
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Canada
Originally posted by greypanda View PostWould you say that you save more money in the UK than you were able to in Canada?
As wages (perm) and rates (contract) for me were less.
But that was not the only reason.
For us we just did not see the potential to do well out there.
But everyone is different.
If you go out there good luck and all the best.Comment
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"Big Data" whats that but big bulltulip, I would kill myself first before describing myself thus
Anyways for what its worth some real world experience, Vancouver is a viable location, it has a reasonable tech market, mainly because it is an overflow from Seatle and the Microsoft and associated businesses there
You see if the office space and so on is full in Seatle, they often move the work to Vancouver simply because its a short commuter flight away.
So Vancouver has kinda benefits just from being close by to Seatle, and a fairly short flight, and easy to do business there
But hey why listen anyone with real world experience
And as someone else said its more a lifestyle decision surely? In which case somewhere like New Zealand would be better...Comment
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Originally posted by stek View PostQuite a few in Harrogate and TSYS not far away, also Leeds and Bradford for work, rates seem to be similar to London now ie shiite. I'm staying in Dublin, all the work is coming here new due to Brexit, some silly rates flying about cos most of the Irish contractors are still heading to UK leaving a glut here...
My last perm job in Leeds was £65k, 2009/10 - I only lasted a year, fell out with boss and walked. Scottish tw@t....
So think again, sonny.
Houses in and around Bradford are very affordable and Bradford is an enormous area that extends into North Yorkshire and isn't bad for commuting (except London, although BA flights to Heathrow are cheaper than the train).
last perm job in the area £70k
last contract in the area £500/daySee You Next TuesdayComment
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Originally posted by Lance View PostManchester is booming as well, just on the wrong side of the hills.
Houses in and around Bradford are very affordable and Bradford is an enormous area that extends into North Yorkshire and isn't bad for commuting (except London, although BA flights to Heathrow are cheaper than the train).
last perm job in the area £70k
last contract in the area £500/day
Nowadays it would be impossible, especially if you had kids you needed to find schools for, the race relations in the area are very problematic, and there are definitely "no go" areas that the police have given up onComment
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Originally posted by BackupBoy View PostWage?
Define:wage
"a fixed regular payment earned for work or services, typically paid on a daily or weekly basis"
I see no issue with 'wage' by that definition. Some people seem to go into a frenzy in relation to the terminology required to be a 'good contractor'. Similar shock expressions below.
Job?
Employer?
Salary?Comment
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Originally posted by bazzawatson View PostGoogle.
Define:wage
"a fixed regular payment earned for work or services, typically paid on a daily or weekly basis"
I see no issue with 'wage' by that definition. Some people seem to go into a frenzy in relation to the terminology required to be a 'good contractor'. Similar shock expressions below.
Job?
Employer?
Salary?
A regular payment, usually on an hourly, daily, or weekly basis, made by an employer to an employee, especially for manual or unskilled work.a particular amount of money that is paid, usually every week, to an employee, especially one who does work that needs physical skills or strength, rather than a job needing a college education:
https://www.collinsdictionary.com/di...y/english/wage
When used as a noun, pay is a general word which you can use to refer to the money you get from your employer for doing your job. Manual workers are paid wages, or a wage. The plural is more common than the singular, especially when you are talking about the actual cash that someone receives. Every week he handed all his wages in cash to his wife. Wages are usually paid, and quoted, as a weekly sum. ...a starting wage of five dollars an hour. Professional people and office workers receive a salary, which is paid monthly. However, when talking about someone's salary, you usually give the annual figure. I'm paid a salary of £15,000 a year. Your income consists of all the money you receive from all sources, including your pay.
Try having a discussion with your accountant and keep mentioning wages.
Stand up in court in an IR35 case and talk about employer and wages.
Resolve contractual issues by blurring the lines between employer.
Shake a clients hand when you get offered a gig and say 'Thanks for employing me, I look forward to my first wage'.
Just silly. Understanding what you do and use the right term isn't hard and it's professional. Your companys services are employed by a client or agent, not you are employed by then. That leads to people mixing up who has actually employed their services. If there is an agent it's them not the client etc.
We see it so often on here that the wrong terminology leads to a lengthy thread trying to get to the bottom of what they mean and it will affect you in the real world. You don't see salesmen or two business doing a deal talking about wages.. it's just silly.'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!Comment
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