Canada's Challenge Is Keeping Techies, BlackBerry Inventor Says (bloomberg.com) 161
The former chief executive officer of BlackBerry added his voice to the chorus of people saying that Canada's main economic hurdle is keeping technology talent. From a report: "The biggest challenge as a country is retaining and recruiting the best people to build industries in Canada and not lose them to other jurisdictions," Mike Lazaridis, who left BlackBerry in 2013, said Thursday at the Waterloo Innovation Summit. Canada is pushing to become a technological leader as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tries to shift away from a commodities-driven economy by increasing funding for technology and offering fast-track visas to highly skilled workers. Cities like Ottawa, the capital, have stepped up recruitment efforts targeting expats in the U.S., while Toronto and its surrounding cities submitted a regional bid Wednesday for Amazon.com's second headquarters. The BlackBerry inventor sees Canada as at the forefront of the development of quantum computers, technology that could transform the world by allowing computers to operate much faster and on larger data sets than ever before.
Pay more (Score:4, Insightful)
Do you think people leave Canada because they want to?
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Yes. Your question suggests that the only reason people would leave Canada is because they are being forced out.
Are there vigilante groups running around Canada and running people out of the country on a rail (as the saying used to be) or is it the government doing this? Does it work like the way England used to ship convicts to Australia?
I am curious about how this forced emigration works because none of my co-workers down there have mentioned any of this to me.
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From the sound of it, it seems to be an economical factor brought on by government. I believe I read something similar to this in the UK medical field [palatinate.org.uk] and US medical field [medscape.com] as well.
There seems to be a very fine balance between regulations that help and ones that actually destroy.
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So people are choosing to leave, not being forced.
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Only if you consider just being able to survive as your one and only choice. You do know there is a difference between "living" and just "existing", right? That is part of being human.
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So not so much forced out as choosing to leave because of overtaxation and cost of living.
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WRONG. People are CHOOSING to leave because of the tax rates. Force is a completely different concept and generally involves violence or the the threat of violence in this context.
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WRONG. People are CHOOSING to leave because of the tax rates. Force is a completely different concept and generally involves violence or the the threat of violence in this context.
If somebody cannot afford something, then following a path that gets him/her out of that expense is being forced: it's not a choice!
Violence is not the only image of force: extortion is. If somebody is living somewhere and paying $1000 as rent, and the rent is suddenly jacked up to $2000, then that person is forced to leave, even if no violence is involved in him arriving at the decision.
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My brother who finally succumbed to a third bout of cancer would have been left financially destitute, if he lived in the states, after the first bout and would have likely died far sooner than he did.
I don't think so.
Here in the states many people live in fear of loosing their jobs and the healthcare that goes with it. For those whose employers provide healthcare insurance. Even with healthcare, a major medical issue can push people into bankruptcy!
While I was in college, I had no income at all, and I developed stage 4 chronic kidney disease. I was on medicaid and they paid all of the costs for getting me listed, doctor visits and all, and would have paid for the surgery, drugs, and everything, with no cost to me at all. I'm still listed, but I'm working now, and my current insurance will pay the full cost of surgery with zero deductible.
My brother-in-law received a lung transplant (1 million dollar operation) free of charge from medi
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Looks like the Canadians, who were only too happy to take in Muslim 'refugees' from the Middle East, were far less enthusiastic about Trump-hating 'Muricans coming over, despite the initial red carpet rollout that they had during the transition.
If Trudeau wins the next election, we'll need a wall on the Northern border as well.
More Like Mismanagement (Score:3)
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Canada has had a number of successful technology companies, but they've all been plagued by mismanagement see Blackberry, Nortel, Corel, etc
Perhaps they need to enact a Too-Big-To-Fail law.
That way, they could reward mismanagement like the US does (see banking industry, auto industry, etc.)
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Canada has had a number of successful technology companies, but they've all been plagued by mismanagement see...Corel
Hey, don't keep Corel in that list! They've acquired - and still sell - WordPerfect, Paradox, WinZip, and WinDVD. It's a retirement home for software.
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Just start an H1B program to bring in "highly educated workers" to fill the gap.
Canada has equivalent visa programs. In general, it is easier for skilled foreigners to go to Canada than to America. It is also easier for foreign students to stay and work after graduation.
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History (Score:2)
Canada (and Britain) have a history of abandoning promising [wikipedia.org] technology [wikipedia.org] to the USA.
Re:History (Score:5, Interesting)
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Not sure about the CF-105 Arrow, I mean, the first flight of the US F-102 Delta Dagger was 5 years before, I'd have to look a lot harder to see if they had any special sauce we didn't.
The first Dagger couldn't go super-sonic. They did get super-sonic figured out, but Wikipedia says the max speed was still only Mach 1.22. The first prototype Arrow went Mach 1.9 the same year Dagger hit Mach 1.22, and Arrow Mark 2 promised to easily pass Mach 2 due to an engine upgrade.
Then Canada signed on to NORAD, with an American push for hosting missile defense systems in Canada, and six months later the Arrow was cancelled and every person who worked on it fired that same day. There's still deba
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None of which is very interesting, seeing as how the Dagger's followon F-106 Delta Dart [wikipedia.org] first flew 3 years after the Dagger and 2 years before the Arrow, achieved Mach 3 in a test flight 8 months after the Arrow's first f
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But it's a 5 years later airplane, at a time when technology was moving very quickly.
First, that excuse can be used to never do anything. Better to build them and then follow on with upgrades.
One of the things that the Arrow was supposed to do was to be a development platform for the Iroquois engine, which used quite a bit of titanium. In addition to making these engines available to other allied jet programs, they were a means to develop Canada's titanium resources and metallurgy. After the Arrow debacle, Canada basically pulled the plug on developing titanium. Only a few years later, the
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Which would be why I immediately followed the sentence you quote with:
Maybe you could try answering that question instead of constructing strawmen?
Bull Crap (Score:1)
More lies by companies to get cheap foreign labour. I work in the IT management field and know many well educated, skilled people who cannot find work. Banks are making record profits and laying off IT staff and out sourcing to India or bringing in cheap labour to replace Canadians. For example
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/rbc-replaces-canadian-staff-with-foreign-workers-1.1315008
Salaries-Show me the money (Score:1)
Again... when private companies are offering crappy wages (with high canadian taxes) comparable to other professions with a lower skill requirement (teaching, nursing) with no pension people are going to go where there is opportunity or choose a different profession. And bonus points to the government for importing more workers to depress wages even more....
I'd move to Toronto in a heartbeat. (Score:2)
If I had a job lined up. Toronto is like a smaller, cleaner, better-organized version of New York. The cost of living is 27% less too.
The only thing is I also do like a place with a little more topography than Toronto, and access to wilderness-y areas within reasonable driving distance. There probably aren't any good places for fly-fishing around Toronto, that's almost a deal-breaker. Maybe Vancouver, then. Weather's better there, too: a bit rainy in the winter but with dry, cool summers with, long, l
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Toronto costs a bit less, but the wages are significantly lower, and if you manage to avoid that, the taxes and cost of living make up for the cost. Ontario healthcare is not particularly as good, so plan on going private for that.
If you do move to Canada, prepare to pay more for pretty much everything.
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Ontario healthcare is not particularly as good, so plan on going private for that.
How exactly does one "plan on going" private in Ontario with health care when providing private health care is essentially illegal?
The only things you can "go private" on are things OHIP doesn't cover, unless you plan to cross the border to the US every time you want to see a doctor.
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Well, waiting times in ER are not necessarily representative of health care quality overall. For example ER waits have traditionally been a particularly weak area for the US, because you have to be triaged along with people who use the ER as their primary contact with the health care system.
It is hard to find any statistical area other than elective surgery where the US outperforms Canada. Canadians have a longer lifespan, can expect to spend 3.3 more years of that lifespan healthy (i.e. not in a nursing
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"I've found waiting times for ERs are way shorter in Canada"
This is because Canada prioritizes lifesaving medicine. For most issues, if you have insurance, the US is better. If you make it to the ER, Canada tends to be better.
"prescription medicine costs a lot less in Canada"
Sort-of. Non-generics tend to be cheaper, if your income is low. If you're professional class, PharmaCare will often not cover anything at all until you are out $10,000. In the States, prescription coverage tends to be cheaper.
If y
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The cost of living is less, but you'd also likely find that your income won't stretch quite as far as it used to. The gross pay is about the same after converting between different currencies, but the tax rates are generally higher in Canada than they are in most places in the USA.
Toronto is right on the shore of Lake Ontario, and I'd be surprised if there isn't at least *SOME* fishing there.
Vancouver's climate is nicer (and the scenery is probably nicer as well), but the cost of living is also highe
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Well, you get what you pay for. I also note that Vancouver has some of the "worst" traffic in Canada -- the average commuter spends 30 hours annually in traffic. This however compares to a US-wide average of 42 hours/year -- and well over 80 in the Bay Area. In my hometown forget the commute -- which his horrible -- the average driver spends 53 hours per year looking for parking.
As you get older, you value your time more than money, because you realize its running out.
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An hour and half driving's not bad at all, especially if traffic isn't bad. And as much as I like eating fish, I like catching them more so I release everything except hatchery trout, which are no loss to sport.
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fucking white males.
Because non-white males don't fish? Never seen a black or asian dude fishing?
P.S. I wish that bigots on Slashdot would at least have the courage to not post as ACs...if you think you are so righteous, then reveal your nickname (not even your real name!) to the world.
'racist' fishermen (Score:2)
Official Bilingualism sucks. (Score:2, Interesting)
There is a reason most senior jobs are held by French people even though they make up a small percentage of the population. Your technical skills barely register, being bilingual is the most important thing. FWIW I have a CBC language ranking as a CS-04, this language nonsense seriously hampers my abilit
News flash (Score:2)
Guy who left Canadian job thinks everyone is just like him - more at 11.
Re:News flash (Score:4, Funny)
(If you're not Canadian, you likely won't get that reference)
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Guess, is it to do with non-integer timezones?
No, keeping 'techies' is a symptom. (Score:2, Interesting)
The cause is lack of ecosystem, including the lack of useful and scalable Venture Capital. It is impossible to grow a venture backed startup in Toronto, once you reach a certain point and need to raise $15M, you run into problems with your unsophisticated (read: small time, inexperienced and Toronto market size thinking) investors who just want out, or get scared.
There isn't an ecosystem, so you can't build an ecosystem. And if you built a company, the only way to get scale customers is to sell where ther
not a visa - want fast track citizenship (Score:3)
I could very easily be tempted to move permanently to the Toronto metro area, but a work visa is not enough to tempt me at this stage of my life (more or less closing in on retirement). If they could offer a faster, simpler route to citizenship, that'd get me there pretty quick.
PS if anyone at my current company is reading this, I don't really mean it.
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Surely their path to citizenship has to be quicker than here in the US, right? All I've ever heard is how horrible the US is for having far more restrictive immigration and naturalization policies than the rest of the world.
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If they could offer a faster, simpler route to citizenship, that'd get me there pretty quick.
Unfortunately, there's no such thing (except in certain cases). The only route to citizenship is to first get a permanent residence permit (PR). Once you have your PR, getting citizenship is easy - you have to stick around long enough (3 or 4 years, I forget the exact amount, being most of the year in Canada) - nothing else is required (except, I think, a clean criminal record) - and you can apply for citizenship (once you do, you get it within 6-12 months typically).
Getting the PR is the difficult part. Th
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signed, What Every Canadian Worker Wants To Say, But Won't.
Including the ones that arrived yesterday, a bunch of them as "brown pigfuckers" and "fake refugees"? What's next in your plan, after genocide in the GTA? Strip a third of the population or so of their citizenship?
How about easy work visas for the US? (Score:4, Interesting)
One interesting thing Canada could do is make it incredibly easy for US citizens to work in Canada. I know I'd move there if I didn't have things tying me down in the US and could have an easily portable work visa. The climate (both literal and political) is better in my opinion...the issue is that there need to be more than a couple of standout tech companies to create an ecosystem. Nortel was absolutely huge until they went bankrupt after the first dotcom bubble, and BlackBerry has basically run its course.
I do hear that Toronto and Vancouver are in the middle of a housing bubble though, so I don't know if now is the right time to move there. But, if US citizens could easily work in the Canadian labor market and not be tethered to an employer the way H-1B visa holders here are, I think a lot of people would jump at the chance to move. I've looked into it in the past, and apparently US citizens don't get any special preference and have to deal with immigration the same way everyone else does.
If they really wanted to accelerate a move, just implement a program where a US citizen with a certain skillset and education can walk into any Canadian embassy and turn in their US passport in exchange for a Canadian one. Overall quality of life seems much better there, so it would just be a matter of convincing people of that.
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If they really wanted to accelerate a move, just implement a program where a US citizen with a certain skillset and education can walk into any Canadian embassy and turn in their US passport in exchange for a Canadian one. Overall quality of life seems much better there, so it would just be a matter of convincing people of that.
Bad idea, a lot of people would do it on impulse (say in reaction to Trump winning another election or whatever), and then be very unhappy when they realize it's not what they wanted and that they cannot go back (I doubt the US would implement an equivalent scheme).
Besides, I don't think Canada wants to just be swamped by hundreds of thousands of Americans all of a sudden, it's difficult to keep a separate identity as is. Also, Quebec would be super pissed for upsetting the franco-anglophone balance.
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But no Trump.
I punch those numbers into my calculator and it makes a happy face.
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Also, why should US citizens get any special treatment up here as Canadians do not get any special treatment south of the border.
Well, assuming NAFTA survives, there is special treatment both ways. Canada has an equivalent of the US TN visa that allows Americans with specified certifications and professions to obtain temporary residency in Canada, just like Engineers and so forth from Canada can legally work in the US (in Engineering positions) without much difficulty.
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The Old-Fashioned Way (Score:5, Insightful)
Fucking pay them.
Re:The Old-Fashioned Way (Score:5, Interesting)
This. Money talks.
We have have 4 Canadians in my small design group of ~20, though only 2 at the moment. For them the pay delta was a 50% raise combined with many more tech options if they needed to change jobs for any reason.
So not only does pay need to be higher, but you need to attract enough companies that folks who move to work their will feel secure enough in the job market as a whole to be willing to put down roots. The magic of Silicon Valley is that despite being a traffic snarled expensive mess you know that if your current dotcom, or startup folds you can go a couple doors down and pick up a job at the next wiz-bang scam shop, likely with a raise.
Companies know that if they setup shop it is easy to hire just about any techy person, though it might cost a pretty penny. If time to market is important, then growing talent internally is foolish.
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Want more tech talent?
Fucking pay them, eh?
FTFY.
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"we make the same dollar salary as US people" (Score:5, Interesting)
Some time ago, I went to up to Montreal for a business trip. Talking with the engineers there, they told me that Canadian salaries are largely the same dollar (number) amount as US firms pay, but their tax burden is far higher, with federal, provincial and VAT taxes taking away a good deal of that salary, plus then the cost of things like gasoline were considerably higher, making the cost of living greater. That can't help. There's also the issue of the climate. Given a choice between working in a warmer climate (California or Texas), working in the Great Frozen North is a really hard sell. There are also other issues like travel hassles to visit family, crossing international borders and so on. I've also been to Toronto a number of times for vacation and I've enjoyed it, but I always went in the warmer months. Toronto reminded me a lot of a cleaner and more polite version of NYC and I enjoyed my vacation, but I've never been there in winter time. People say the lake "helps" but I can still imagine the winter nights being dark and full of Horton's. I can't stand the darkness of winter here in Massachusetts, and geometry tells me it's far worse in Canada. So Canadian firms need to come up with means of sweetening the pot to attract talent, one knob being paying more.
Disclaimer list: 1) anecdotal, employer could have been stingy, employee could have been a poor performer 2) a big metro area, as they are expensive in the US, too 3) years ago, when the US dollar was stronger vs. CAD 4) comparing COL across countries is hard, as I pay more out of my paycheck for health insurance in the US than a Canadian does, who pays it in taxes.
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Just note: Quebec (Montreal) has higher taxes and lower salaries than Ontario (Toronto) in general, although in Montreal the cost of living is cheaper and there a lot more subsidized things (e.g. public transit, university tuition is cheaper). Quebec is in general more socialist than Ontario (and pretty much all of the other provinces), with all the good and bad that that entails.
I think money-wise, Toronto & southern Ontario compares well to the US, yes the taxes are slightly higher but you get full he
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Canadian Here (Score:2)
So a couple of points. I'd say generally speaking the pay in the US is more. There are also more opportunity (though perhaps more competition as well). Tax burden is heavier in Canada for sure. I don't think the cold or the darkness really matters when trying to KEEP talent, as they would already be used to it. Trying to ATTRACT talent, well that might be a different matter. Also, another point is that most of the places where these jobs are located are also the most expensive to live in Canada, Toronto and
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Trying to ATTRACT talent, well that might be a different matter. I doubt Travel is a big deal, Canada is BIG. I live about 2000 km away from my family for example. There are plenty of families that are spread across the country.
To clarify my point about travel, it was specifically for the point of attracting talent and either having family visit you or you visit family. When I was a kid, traveling to Canada from the US was really easy -- you showed a US driver's license and the polite Canadian border guard waved you through and told you to enjoy your trip. Nowadays to consider Canadian travel you need passports ($110/adult, $80/kid), so for my family of four, that's spending $380 just to be able to cross the border. Right now we l
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I don't think the cold or the darkness really matters when trying to KEEP talent, as they would already be used to it. Trying to ATTRACT talent, well that might be a different matter.
Paradoxically, in many cases it's the reverse. Immigrants from poor countries are looking for a place where they can get their foot in the door and get permanent residence/citizenship, and the ease of immigration/job availability will trump weather concerns. However once an immigrant from Iran or China for example gets their Canadian passport, it's much easier for them to get a job in the US (and they always have the fallback option of returning to Canada). At this point they might actually make decisions b
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Canada's real challenges: (Score:1)
Would be simply to realize that while Ontario is in the center of Canada it is not the only concern of Canadians.
Oh and maybe the idea of a Substitute drama teacher running the country that has no idea what technology actually is. Then again all of this is really to distract from the corruption in his own party and specifically the leadership of Ontario.
Maybe, just maybe the dumber Trudeau could focus on the problems of current Canadians (such as job retraining for the manufacturing jobs that are being lost
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I am living it.. (Score:1)
we're from the government, and we're here to help (Score:2)
"PMJT tries to [help] by increasing funding for technology"
no thanks!
Needs More Startups (Score:4, Interesting)
1. Bombardier -Horribly mismanaged
2. Mining -Since environmental responsibility was on my mind, I ruled that out.
There were a few smaller organizations, but they seemed to be shrinking rather than growing. One example is the nuclear power sector.
If the Canadian government wants a high tech industry, they need to invest in some scientific research. Sure, it's a gamble that will take decades to pay off if it ever does. It's no coincidence that The Bay Area has four national labs, and the most high tech jobs.
I was at a lab in Ontario five years ago, and that place was struggling. There was so much equipment gathering dust and in disrepair it was astounding! I've since learned that lab went out of business.
Canada already has a very simple immigration system. A lot of people who can't get into the US go to Canada. One of my coworkers immigrated to Canada from China. He ended up in the US because he couldn't find work in Canada. He used to commute between Windsor and Detroit every day until he was granted a US visa.
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If the Canadian government wants a high tech industry, they need to invest in some scientific research. Sure, it's a gamble that will take decades to pay off if it ever does. It's no coincidence that The Bay Area has four national labs, and the most high tech jobs.
Canada invests a lot in research (at least in my field), and the universities are quite good. The University of Toronto is on par with any Ivy League university in the States for example. The problem is that a lot of people have nowhere to work once they do their degree if they want to stay in their field of specialization. I've seen tons of people who have Master's and PhD degrees in mechanical and electrical engineering end up as business analysts at banks and consulting firms, doing nothing related to th
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I've seen tons of people who have Master's and PhD degrees in mechanical and electrical engineering end up as business analysts at banks and consulting firms, doing nothing related to the fields in which they became experts in, because that's the only thing that is open to them if they don't want to move to the US.
There were a lot of engineers going to Wall Street the around the time of the housing bubble. The finance industry was paying way more than anywhere else. Things seem to have flipped now that tech is booming again.
Any start-up that wants to make it big in Canada will naturally orient itself towards the US market (which is easy due to NAFTA etc.) and will then end up being bought up by an American corporation or investment fund which then will often move the headquarters to the US. I've seen that happen, Canadian start-ups moving to Silicon Valley because of the investors there, nothing to do with government support.
Perhaps the Canadian government could invest in a few startups in an effort to keep them within Canada. (Socialism! Scary!) It wouldn't have to be a permanent program. Once a few companies succeed, Canadian VC won't see it as a large risk. It just needs to be demonstrated that success is po
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There were a lot of engineers going to Wall Street the around the time of the housing bubble. The finance industry was paying way more than anywhere else. Things seem to have flipped now that tech is booming again.
That's true, however in Canada this is still happening, the banks are strong (they didn't implode or explode during the financial crisis, since they were...conservative, like most Canadian companies), and they like hiring people with tech/science degrees, and there just isn't that large of a tech industry as in the US. The U. of Toronto keeps chugging out electronics graduates at all levels all the time, they are good, however the only major electronics employer is AMD (the former ATI) and they're not very
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Perhaps the Canadian government could invest in a few startups in an effort to keep them within Canada. (Socialism! Scary!) It wouldn't have to be a permanent program. Once a few companies succeed, Canadian VC won't see it as a large risk. It just needs to be demonstrated that success is possible outside of Silicon Valley.
There are various government programs for helping startups (at least in Ontario), I've no idea if the money being offered is enough. I think part of the problem is that there aren't that many Canadian VCs, and people who want to invest in VC funds in Canada will invest in US funds since they are so much more numerous, bigger, varied, successful, etc.
One idea I've seen floated around is co-investment into VC funds, e.g. the government promising to match any investment in a company that a VC makes, or funds w
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Are you aware that most of the things you use daily are made of materials mined somewhere (and in all likelihood, in poorly regulated third-world countries)?. Mining is not bad in itself, and Canada is surely not the worst place in terms of regulation.
Probably not taking a job in the mining industry lets you sleep at night, but, in fact, you are fooling yourself.
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Probably not taking a job in the mining industry lets you sleep at night, but, in fact, you are fooling yourself.
A lot of my decisions are decided based on whether or not I will be able to sleep at night. I am aware that I am fooling myself, but so far it's working.
Huh. Explain? (Score:1)
It's a simple concept (Score:2)
Pay them more, or watch them go to the U.S.
Can't afford it? Don't bother being in business then. You can't expect to pay high tech workers the same wage as you do a Subway employee.
No thank you (Score:1)
This sounds far-fetched (Score:2)
As a Canadian Army veteran, I was trained as an Oracle developer, went to Canadian universities and colleges, and then moved to the US.
I didn't move for money, or because I didn't like the military or anything, I moved because I met someone who was a citizen of another country with a kid there.
You can make all the retention programmes in the world and I still would have moved.
Did I make more in the US? Sure.
Did I like Canada's single payer national healthcare, run by provinces? Loved it!
Worry more about the
Real story: (Score:2)
Canadian tech company hints at Canadian Government to throw money at Canadian tech companies.
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People leave Canada for two reasons: climate and taxes. The Government can't change the weather, but they really should consider fixing the taxation system if they really want entrepreneurs to 'build industries' here. We have 43% incomes tax plus crazy corporate tax rates (Federal and Provincial), small businesses have all the same red tape as large ones which impedes growth. On top of that Trudeau and Wynne have added carbon taxes and are now in process of closing 'tax loop-holes' which are actually reasonable ways for small business owners to actually save for retirement. Now why would anyone want to leave?
Fear not, global warming should largely benefit Canada. That will solve one of the biggest issues.
Re:Climate and taxes (Score:4, Funny)
People leave Canada for two reasons: climate and taxes.
I always thought they left to find better beer.
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We have 43% incomes tax plus crazy corporate tax rates (Federal and Provincial), small businesses have all the same red tape as large ones which impedes growth.
Say what? I just looked at my most recent pay stub, and while I make a good middle class salary, the total deductions from my gross comes out to 24%, including CPP, EI, & Tax. In order to hit that 43% you would have to be well into the six figures, at which point you can bloody well afford it.
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Is RIM/Blackberry's failure a symptom of any larger Canadian malaise, or something unique to that company? They had a great product, but failed to transition in a lineup of smart phones that would have kept them competitive with Android and Apple. Heck, I know hindsight is 20/20, but had Microsoft formed their partnership w/ RIM, rather than Nokia, and let RIM build on a suite of office applications to complement what Microsoft already had, like Office, OneNote, et al, that could have been a viable offeri