Germany tops the list of the most desired destinations for tech workers
sifted.euI moved to Germany from the US two years ago for work. I love it here. AMA.
What has been your biggest gain? Also biggest loss? Appreciate it
Biggest gain has been a sense of belonging. I don't personally fit into the American culture and find the directness and logical nature of Germans to be more my fit. I've also found a relationship and finally feel as though I can start a life here, whereas I felt perpetually lost anywhere I lived in the US.
Biggest loss has been the distance from family, especially during the pandemic (though of course I couldn't predict that). You don't realize how far away you are from someone until you hang up the phone with them and feel the distance set in.
lol no. I had been there for 2 years and the place was crazy racist towards blackish people. A big no from me.
I moved to Denmark and yes, it's out in the open. I'm a white Australian and I can still see it, granted I have a lot of international friends here.
That sucks. Which region were you in? Germany various a lot.
Which city/region are you in ?
I moved from Houston, Texas to Dresden. You need a thick skin in the beginning, lot of culture shocks, and hard to find work as it's very buerocratic here. Only written recommendation letters and phd's, I never needed anywhere else.
German tech salaries are quite low compared to US and UK last time I checked.
German quality of life is quite good compared to the US and the UK is a shit show due to brexit these days.
Moving to Germany from a European country is as simple as crossing the border. Moving to the US for most people in the world is a nightmare.
I for one would never go back to the US now that I live in Germany. The few British people I know moved to Germany before brexit kicks in to literally escape from the UK.
Money isn't everything, not many people change their entire life and move to other countries for money alone
why?
Given that 16% of the sample (from relocate.me) is from India, and Indians have virtually no path to PR in the US, I'm guessing residency.
Europe (at least the technocratic level) has been pro immigration for a while, so network effects probably also enter the equation.
Second this. Straight forward Immigration policy. Pay taxes, take language test and in 2/3 years you get a PR. 7, for a citizenship.