1. Global Talent Stream: Employers in Canada who are looking to hire specific IT specialists may be eligible for a streamlined and expedited Labour Market Impact Assessment under the Global Talent Stream . Software engineers and designers, computer programmers and interactive media creators, information systems analysts and consultants, and managers of computer and information systems are a few examples of professions that qualify. Employers who submit their LMIA through the Global Talent Stream are entitled to a two-week processing time. Foreign workers are also qualified for two-week processing of their work permit application following the LMIA's approval.
2. CUSMA Professionals: There is a list of roughly 60 professions under the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement that are eligible for a facilitated work visa known as the CUSMA Professional work permit. Computer system analysts, graphic designers, technical magazine writers, and computer engineers are a few of the IT-related professions that are eligible. The Canadian employer is not required to secure an LMIA prior to the American or Mexican citizen applying for their work visa, which facilitates this work permit. Employers can bring foreign workers to Canada faster because no LMIA is necessary.
3. Intra Company Transferees : Another work permit alternative, known as Intra-Company Transfer (ICT), is enabled similarly to the CUSMA Professional work permit in that no LMIA is necessary. The worker must have worked for the company overseas for at least a year in order to be qualified for the ICT work permit, and there must be a qualifying relationship between the two businesses (subsidiary, affiliate, parent, or branch). For intra-company transferees, there is no comprehensive list of approved occupations, unlike CUSMA and Global Talent Stream. Instead, a worker may be eligible under one of three categories. The first two are managerial roles that aren't frequently applicable in an IT context. IT workers often use the ICT work permit under the third category, which is for employees with specialised and proprietary knowledge of the organisation or its products.
Employees can be trained and experienced in very particular ways and in very specialised domains because businesses are continuously trying and developing with new strategies to offer a greater range of products. Even the most qualified IT workers from Canada may find it challenging to get jobs because of this. In these situations, it would be required to transfer a foreign employee who is well-versed in the company's unique systems and products. This can apply to computer engineers who have created specialised software for a company's internal usage as well as programmers and developers who have created the software products used by the company.
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