Hmm.. well,education is a essential tool for understanding the big picture.Of cos it depends on which edu. level you are in.With the experience and knowledge combine will be better off for the individual.As mention I don't think,I am able to fit in as a engineer.For new PR is better to get a job 1st.. or else it going to be hard.
Rgs.
Food for thoughts
Somehow, to Indians - hard to get a job is never an issue. It is amazing how they think out of the box of social and legal constraints.
More and more of them are arriving in Perth, the double degrees holders, MSc, PhD holders working immediately in service stations, fast food outlets, cleaning staff before jumping ships. They seems to fit into every jobs.
Some are so arrogant like the Door Plus sales manager at Osborne Park. I would rather give my business to a decent Aussie bloke.
An ex-Singapore public servant complain about his Canadian-Indian computing programmer working on govt contracts for $56k, jump ship to the vendor (Fujitsu) doing the same job $67k and now disappeared into an Italian oil company operating in West Perth.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/bus...lamboyant-tycoon/story-e6frg95o-1225973580465
Tough times for flamboyant tycoon Pankaj Oswal
Andrew Burrell From: The Australian December 20, 2010 12:00AM
"NOW the war is on." These words were written by Pankaj Oswal to a former employee in a series of angry emails obtained by The Australian.
They encapsulate the flamboyant Indian tycoon's combative and authoritarian approach to business.
They may even offer a hint of why the Perth-based Oswal's business empire lies in tatters today.
He has debts of $800 million and is believed to have flown out of Australia, amid allegations of serious financial irregularities.
On Friday night, ANZ issued a shock announcement that Oswal's Burrup Fertilisers, which built a $700m ammonia plant in Western Australia's Pilbara region, had been placed with a receiver and a sale process launched. To some of those who have observed Oswal's corporate activities since he arrived in Perth almost a decade ago, this public unravelling should come as no surprise.
For behind the Oswals' A-list parties and their flamboyance in building Australia's most expensive house in Perth's western suburbs lies a tale involving allegations against his company of unpaid debts, broken promises and a disregard for the rules.
"I am not surprised --
he thought he was invincible," a former close associate of Oswal's said yesterday. "
His attitude has always been that it's his company and he will do whatever he wants.
"But also the law in India is not as strict or as consistent as in Australia, so you can usually get yourself out of trouble over there."
Oswal, 37, lost control of Burrup Fertilisers on Friday after a dispute that had been simmering for months with his 35 per cent shareholder in Burrup Holdings, Norwegian chemicals giant Yara International.
The brawl hit the courts amid allegations by Yara that Oswal was using Burrup Fertilisers funds for his private interests and was refusing to open the company's accounts to scrutiny. Burrup denied the claims.
ANZ appears to have become fed up with Oswal and ordered receivers PPB Advisory to sell the business. The bank referred to the allegation of irregularities. In a further blow to Oswal, Yara has been put in charge and is one of the obvious potential buyers.
Oswal's apparent inability to work amicably with others can be traced back almost to the time he landed in Perth with dreams of building the world's biggest ammonia plant on a remote patch of dirt in the Pilbara.
Oswal is involved in another case in the West Australian Supreme Court as part of a brawl with a Perth property syndicate over claims he reneged on a leasing deal he struck at the height of the resources boom.
When Oswal was forced to be examined in that case in May, it produced evidence that virtually all of his assets had liabilities hanging over them.
Three years ago, Indian company Paharpur Cooling Towers launched legal action in the Supreme Court against Burrup Fertilisers, seeking $4m it claimed Oswal refused to pay for work it conducted at his Pilbara ammonia plant.
Oswal attempted to shift the blame for the outstanding bill on to his estranged former business partner and fellow Indian, Vikas Rambal, who responded by lodging an affidavit containing damaging allegations about Oswal's business practices. Oswal denied the claims.
Now, as receiver PPB Advisory begins a sale process of Burrup Fertilisers in an attempt to recoup up to $800m, The Australian can reveal a series of emails sent between Oswal and an Indian teacher he hired to tutor his daughter in Perth.
The emails involve allegations that Oswal's company Oswal Projects imported the tutor from India while telling the Immigration Department that the man would work as a chef -- an in-demand occupation under Australian laws.
Oswal denied all the allegations when they were put to him recently, before his company was placed in receivership.
The documents show that Oswal told the tutor, Prakash Moghe, he would complain to Indian police that "you have stolen things from our apartment and run away from here" and warning him that "now the war is on".
A trail of documents and emails show Dr Moghe was hired last year by Oswal Projects to tutor Oswal's 12-year-old daughter Vasundhara in Perth to help her win admission to the exclusive Lawrence School in India.
But the company allegedly gained approval from the Department of Immigration and Citizenship for Dr Moghe to work as a chef -- and the working visa was granted on that basis.
Dr Moghe, who has had a long career as a teacher in India, says he never worked as a chef while in Australia.
Oswal said Dr Moghe had applied for a position as a chef with Otarian, the vegetarian restaurant business run by his wife Radhika, but admitted that he went on to work as a tutor while in Australia.
It is not known whether Oswal Projects was ever investigated over this. The department declined to comment.
Sources have provided The Australian with email correspondence between Dr Moghe and Oswal's human resources manager in July 2009, stating that he would be working as a tutor for Vasundhara. Dr Moghe also provided a copy of an "internal agreement" with Oswal Projects from July 2009, stating he was "invited to come to Australia for training and tutoring purposes".
A separate "offer of employment" stated that Dr Moghe would work as a chef. However, Dr Moghe said he only signed that document, and some others, after being told they were for "internal formalities" and assuming they were for visa purposes.