I have been
offered a job in Vancouver with Microsoft. What happens with my taxes
if I work in Canada.
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david ingram
replies:
This is about the
first public question I have answered in a week now. My email was
killed when My son started an accidental reformatting. Luckily,
Richard Pitt, my computer guru and a partner in the VERY FIRST
COMMERCIAL Internet Service Provider in Canada (www.wimsey.com) has
acoup,le of backups running at all times and we did not lose anything
that I know of.
However, restoring
the email files with all its directories and permissions and, and, and
has been an amazing process and full of funny glitches. I think it is
now up and running but over 3,000 messagfes have just been dumped by me
in the last week because I have been unable to deal with them. In
other words, nothing 'up to' the reformatting incident was lost, but
most received since has been and will be ignored. I just am
incapable of picking the important ones out.
Remember that if
you are a customer or client, you should put "YOUR NAME AND PAYING
CUSTOMER" in the Subject line - nothing else. If something says
Urgent or Important, it is spammed out because half of the spam says
that. Just put "YOUR NAME" and "PAYING CUSTOMER" in the subject.
Back to the
question asked. I have suggested where to go ont he website fo rthe
information and also included an article which explains what is
happening in BC right now. It isn't just MICROSOFT.
GOTO www.centa.com
and read
1. the US/CANADA
Income Tax Section in the second box down on the right hand side - and
2. The October 1995 newsletter in the top left hand box.
The following by
Cynthia Yoo will give you an idea of what is happening in Vancouver in
the software business.
Why Microsoft Loves Richmond, BC
Here, the company can import foreign tech workers,
and maybe
prod US lawmakers.
TheTyee.ca
If
you want
to understand why Microsoft is about to open a 700-employee software
development centre in Richmond, B.C., and how those operations mesh
with other
multinational corporations and a global high-tech work force, it helps
to talk
to Steve Ha.
Ha
helps run TecAce,
based in
Redmond, Washington. His firm develops software for Samsung mobile
devices and
requires Korean-speaking employees experienced in Samsung technology.
"It's
difficult for Koreans to obtain a green-card even after five or six
years of
work in the U.S. and we heard that it's much easier to get them into
Canada for
work," Ha says.
"I've
heard of other firms here gearing up to open offices in Richmond or
Vancouver
because of the U.S. visa problems."
Those
other
firms are following the lead of the biggest software developer of all.
Likewise,
Vancouver Mayor Sam Sullivan was optimistic that having Microsoft in
Richmond would
promote jobs and technological innovation in B.C.
Across
the
border, however, some point
out that Microsoft and other companies are
using the Richmond centre to hire foreign workers they can't otherwise
for
their U.S. operations.
Others
believe it's a tactic to pressure the U.S. government to remove its cap
on
foreign worker visas. In fact, Microsoft has admitted
that it decided to open the Richmond centre
in part because it couldn't hire enough foreign workers for their U.S.
facilities.
The
US H-1B
visa
Microsoft
and
other tech industries in the U.S. hire foreign workers through the H-1B
visa.
Originally, these visas were established to attract skilled
professionals to
come to the U.S., work for five to six years and apply for citizenship.
However,
in
2006, about three quarters of these visas were taken by Indian
outsourcing
firms such as Infosys.
These
firms
send Indian workers to U.S. firms for two to four year terms in order
to study
their operations and then outsource the work back to India-based
companies.
This
discovery
led to a U.S.
Senate investigation into allegations that
Microsoft and other companies were using these visas to outsource U.S.
jobs overseas,
contrary to its mandate to attract skilled immigrants. In response,
Microsoft
and others countered that current immigration policies were antiquated
and did
not meet the needs of globalized economies.
"Microsoft,
like many big U.S. high tech employers, was keen to push the recently
failed
U.S. immigration reform bill which upped the quotas for skilled
migrants,"
explained Mark Ellis, professor of geography at the University of
Washington.
Ellis
thinks
the timing of Microsoft's July announcement, so close at the heel of
the failed
U.S. immigration bill in June, might have been intended to signal that
Microsoft would offshore its operations to Canada if it doesn't get its
way on
immigration reform.
Microsoft
spokesperson Lou Gellos told The Tyee, "Discussion about [a centre] in
Western Canada has been going on for 10 years or more. In the last year
or so,
the debate has intensified." The failed immigration bill, he said, was
"certainly one of the motivations, but not the main motivation" for
his company's moving ahead on its Richmond plans.
Canada's
welcome mat
Canada
is
welcoming U.S. companies looking for more accommodating immigration
policies.
After all Canada has a labour shortage of highly skilled workers.
Earlier this
spring, B.C. reported a record low unemployment rate of four per cent
and
predicted a shortfall of 350,000 workers in key fields.
Currently,
Canada has no caps on all classes of foreign worker visas and last
November,
the Canadian government launched the Advantage
Canada Plan, under which the combined ministries of Citizenship
and
Immigration, Human Resources, and Service Canada recently began measures
to improve its Temporary Foreign Worker
Program.
"The
Temporary Foreign Worker Program requires businesses to look for
Canadian hires
first and file a labour market opinion that there is a need for foreign
workers," explains Lori Reimer of Citizenship and Immigration Canada.
"Essentially it is a supply and demand issue."
That
market
analysis process was relaxed for Microsoft. Reportedly,
Microsoft enjoyed an expedited process
of only two weeks to obtain their visas, but other firms have not
enjoyed that
privilege.
Steve
Ha's
TecAce has set-up what he call's a "virtual office" in Richmond,
until the six month long process to hire foreign workers from Korea is
completed. "Our branch is only a virtual-office for now because the
process [in Canada] is much more complicated and time-consuming than we
expected."
It's
a flat
world after all
Fast
fading
is the assumption that North American high-tech workers are protected
from
outsourcing if they are involved in complex projects. The common belief
was
that it was too difficult to coordinate high-quality work over
differing
time-zones and cultural and language barriers.
"Absolutely
not. It doesn't matter anymore if you manufacture fruit-of-the-loom
underwear
or complex code," states Marcus Courtney of the Washington
Alliance of
Technology Workers.
"Companies
want to find out...who can do the work cheapest and they move their
facilities,
products and services around the globe to do that. Boeing's Dreamliner
project in the Northwest is a perfect example of this. It's simply a
myth that
white-collar jobs are simply too complex, too difficult for their
companies to
outsource," says Courtney.
When
asked if
temporary foreign worker visa programs are used to outsource jobs, Anthony
D'Costa,
professor of Comparative International Development at the University of
Washington says, "Short-term visa programs are functional. They are
trying
to meet labour shortages without committing to having more foreigners
permanently."
"How
many will come in the short term is difficult to say but I am certain
[it's]
not large enough to displace local workers wholesale. Besides,
employers want
good quality professionals and the world does not have an infinite
supply of
them," says D'Costa.
He
asks:
"Which would you prefer? Foreign workers coming to Canada and working
and
spending their earnings in Canada or Canadian firms doing the work
abroad using
foreign workers and earning profits for the Canadian shareholders?"
Related
Tyee
stories:
·
Why
Google Is Bill Gates' Nightmare
The search engine company is about to get the capital to reinvent
personal
computing and leave Microsoft in the dust.
·
How
We Are
Outsourcing BC
Charles Campbell's four-part series looks at industry and government.
·
Denial
as Projections
Place BC Cities Under Water
Dyke plans, property values don't reflect sea rise predictions.
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It is very unlikely that blind or unexpected email to me will be answered. I receive anywhere from 100 to 700 unsolicited emails a day and usually answer anywhere from 2 to 20 if they are not from existing clients. Existing clients are advised to put their 'name and PAYING CUSTOMER' in the subject line and get answered first. I also refuse to be a slave to email and do not look at it every day and have never ever looked at it when I am out of town. e bankruptcy expert US Canada Canadian American Mexican Income Tax help
david ingram's US / Canada Services
US / Canada / Mexico tax, Immigration and working Visa Specialists
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$1,700 would be for two people with income from two countries
Catch - up returns for the US where we use the Canadian return as a guide for seven years at a time will be $150 to $500.00 per year depending upon numbers of bank accounts, RRSP's, existence of rental houses, self employment, etc.
Just a guideline not etched in stone.
David Ingram expert income tax and immigration help and preparation of US Canada Mexico non-resident and cross border returns with rental dividend wages self-employed and royalty foreign tax credits family estate trust trusts income tax convention treaty advice on bankruptcy