Anonymous wrote:I an interviewing for a fully-remote job that’s based in the US, but has a Canadian presence. I am definitely thrilled to have that as an option. Am I actively looking in Canada? No. But would I give preference to a job that has a presence there? Definitely.
I am also very concerned about what’s happening here. The job market was already tough but is now horrible — Trump’s decisions on tariffs causing economic instability are making it worse, and companies are laying off, switching gears, downsizing, and even putting job postings from two months ago on hold. This has happened to me twice - made it to the final round of interviews only to he told the position is no longer open or has been paused. DOGE is firing Feds saying “go be more productive in the private sector” but there are no jobs available for highly skilled / highly compensated workers. Trump is creating an economic and unemployment shitshow along with higher prices for goods- when people can’t work they can’t pay their bills, can’t feed their families or pay rent, and then crime increases and violence increases. And then the government can use martial law to ship all the criminals abroad with no repercussions.
This is a seriously scary situation. I don’t know who benefits from it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tech wages outside the US are a fraction of those in the States.
By all means move to have a life experience or change of scenery. Don’t move because you think you will have a higher standard of living. It will be much worse. Whether the other factors compensate for that, only you can say.
Don't be ridiculous. There are any number of countries in which the standard of living is as high or higher than in the US.
https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/standard-of-living-by-country
You can check it here using several sources. Hint: the US is not number one by anyone's standard.
And those places are probably not going to just let you in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My spouse is currently applying for a visa to work in the UK that would allow me to work as well. We definitely won't make as much money as in the US but we're at a stage in life where that doesn't matter so much (kids out of college).
I was a fed for years so my tech salary was not the level of private tech salaries here. I think it’s a lateral move salary wise.
What websites or places are the best to look for jobs in the UK? I have been checking indeed. My spouse is eligible for an ancestry visa in the UK but he’s not ready to make that leap. I’m hoping that if I find a job, it would make the conversation more of a real possibility instead of a lofty, panicked idea.
I think the quality of life in the UK and Canada are comparable to here but I’ve only spent short stints in either country. Living on a government salary here isn’t the life of luxury.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thoughts? Yes. Actively doing it? No. I'm a fed working in environmental review, I assume these laws don't translate.
I’m having more of the thoughts than my spouse which is currently the only thing holding me back.
I get more concerned daily, but I see others in the DMV going through life as normal. I wanted to almost “check” to see if I was the line panicked person.
Anonymous wrote:My spouse is currently applying for a visa to work in the UK that would allow me to work as well. We definitely won't make as much money as in the US but we're at a stage in life where that doesn't matter so much (kids out of college).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tech wages outside the US are a fraction of those in the States.
By all means move to have a life experience or change of scenery. Don’t move because you think you will have a higher standard of living. It will be much worse. Whether the other factors compensate for that, only you can say.
Don't be ridiculous. There are any number of countries in which the standard of living is as high or higher than in the US.
https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/standard-of-living-by-country
You can check it here using several sources. Hint: the US is not number one by anyone's standard.
Anonymous wrote:Tech wages outside the US are a fraction of those in the States.
By all means move to have a life experience or change of scenery. Don’t move because you think you will have a higher standard of living. It will be much worse. Whether the other factors compensate for that, only you can say.
Anonymous wrote:Thoughts? Yes. Actively doing it? No. I'm a fed working in environmental review, I assume these laws don't translate.