Tag Archive for: visa

This article was written by Sam Beckbessinger.

Part 2 of 2. In part 1, Sam discussed her budget, moving people, moving pets, and securing visas. Click here for part 1.

Bringing your stuff vs. buying new stuff

I spent a lot of time debating the pros and cons of bringing furniture with us (this decision had a spreadsheet all to itself). Ultimately, here’s what I decided: it’s not worth bringing anything that’s not priceless to you.

Partly, that’s just because of the timing. The fastest quotes we received promised to transport our things in 6 weeks (they lied). You can expect this to be more like 3 months at minimum, and several people I spoke to, who’d made similar moves, said it ended up being between 6-9 months (I’m 7 months in and counting, but to be fair, there was a whole global pandemic that slowed things down a bit).

That rules out bringing your bed, unless you want to risk sleeping on the floor for half a year. You can’t bring appliances, because the electrical outlets are different. So you’re down to deciding whether to bring stuff like a couch, dining table, desk, etc.

If you own some very expensive furniture, or priceless family heirlooms, then sure, bring it all with you, but assume you’ll have to live without it for a long time. That might mean moving into a furnished apartment at first, or really embracing minimalism for a while.

I own a couple of heirloom armchairs, many boxes of books and some artworks that fall into the “priceless to me” category, so we decided to bring over a container of non-essentials, but to re-buy all of our basics (like a new couch) in the UK. Because we weren’t paying for this part of the move ourselves, I chose a company that wasn’t the cheapest but purported to be the fastest. This was a huge mistake. They’ve been a nightmare to deal with, and cost R21,148.

If I did this again, I would have just booked a medium-sized MoveCube for my sentimental shit (which would have cost me R11,862), expected it to take 6+ months to arrive, and bought everything else from scratch.

Really, if you’re not that attached to your stuff, by far the easiest thing to do is sell or give away everything and start fresh on the other side.

The tragic fact is that you will get almost nothing for selling everything you own, and it will cost you a lot of money to replace it all. You can mitigate that somewhat by being thrifty about what you buy, but you’ve got to balance thrift against how big your schlep appetite is.

For furniture, I’m a big believer in buying quality brands, second-hand. When I moved to Cape Town, I bought a used Coricraft couch for R3,000 through Gumtree. Four years later I sold it for R2,300. Compare that to the new R2,000 bookshelf I bought from Mr Price Home that I ultimately got R200 for.

I made about R12,000 selling almost everything I owned back in Cape Town. We also sold our car, which got us an extra R60,000.

Fitting out a new house for two people in the UK cost us about R50,000, with a mix of charity shop finds, TK Maxx and Ikea.

Transporting our sentimental stuff and buying new household stuff cost us R74,662 in total. We could have saved R10,000 by going with a different shipping company (and I’m kicking myself that we didn’t). We probably could have spent a bit less kitting out our home if I’d had more time to spend in charity shops before everything locked down.

Finding somewhere to live

It’s difficult to flat-hunt from afar, so it can be smart to send one person ahead to stay in an AirBnB for a few weeks while they lock down a place to live, before the rest of you arrive. We did that, and it cost us an additional R11,937.

When you do find a new house or flat to rent, you’ll need to pay a deposit on it. Ours cost R36,898 including the first month’s rent. Cambridge rents aren’t cheap, yo. You should be able to offset this by getting the security deposit back on your old South African flat.

Overall, the cost of finding and securing a new place to live came to R48,835.

Financial emigration

This could be a whole post on its own, but basically, know that if you want to take all of your financial assets out of the country (for instance, you want to move your retirement savings to your new home) you will have to apply for a process called financial emigration. When you financially emigrate, you will have to pay capital gains tax on these assets. Depending on what assets you own, this could mean an eye-wateringly huge tax bill, and it is not a decision to be taken lightly.

The good news is that you can move overseas without immediately applying for financial emigration, and for most people, it’s a good idea to first move, find your feet and figure out your life plans before you initiate this process.

Figuring out what makes the most sense for you can be complicated, so talk to an expert if you need advice. I got excellent support from a business called Creative CFO, who charges a transparent R750 an hour (I love transparent pricing when it comes to financial advice).

So, was it worth it?

In reality, our move didn’t really cost us R185k, because we had a moving stipend, the R70k from selling our car and furniture, and the returned security deposit on our SA flat, all of which offset our costs. But if you’re thinking about making a similar move yourself, that’s a reasonable estimate of what you’d need to have saved up, if you wanted to follow a similar process. Or you could keep things really simple, sell all your shit, move into a furnished flat, and just take yourself and some bags, in which case you really only need about R30-R50k.

Everyone’s financial life is different. Spending nearly R200k to move to a different country might seem like an insane waste to you, or it might seem totally worth it. It was worth it to us, in the long run, and we were very lucky to have the savings and moving stipend so that we could.

I really believe that being more open and transparent and honest about how we spend our money helps to demystify it, and helps other people have the information they need to make better decisions. I hope that lifting up the lid to show you the real money I spent (including the dumb spending mistakes I made) is helpful to at least one of you, somewhere!

I guess the moral of the story is, never get a cat.

Wishing you Vogon-blasters, warm weather and lots of spreadsheets,
Your friend Sam.

For information as to how Relocation Africa can help you with your Mobility, Immigration, Research, Remuneration, and Expat Tax needs, email info@relocationafrica.com, or call us on +27 21 763 4240.

Sources: [1], [2]. Image sources: [1], [2].

Recently, we launched outbound immigration services to various locations, including the United Kingdom, which you can learn more about by visiting our website here, or viewing our outbound services brochure here.

Our Immigration Lead, Lynn Mackenzie, recently had the pleasure of speaking to Antonio, our United Kingdom immigration partner, about the immigration landscape in the UK.

To listen to Lynn and Antonio’s conversation about immigration in the current context, click here to view the recording, or view it below.

We would like to say a huge thank you to Antonio for his insights. We hope you enjoy the recording.

For information as to how Relocation Africa can help you with your Mobility, Immigration, Research, Remuneration, and Expat Tax needs, email info@relocationafrica.com, or call us on +27 21 763 4240.

Sources: [1], [2]. Image sources: [1], [2].

Recently, we launched outbound immigration services to various locations, including the United States, which you can learn more about by visiting our website here, or viewing our outbound services brochure here.

Our Immigration Lead, Lynn Mackenzie, recently had the pleasure of speaking to Noah, our United States Immigration partner, about the immigration landscapes in the US.

To listen to Lynn and Noah’s conversation about immigration in the current context, click here to view the recording, or view it below.

We would like to say a huge thank you to Noah for his insights. We hope you enjoy the recording.

For information as to how Relocation Africa can help you with your Mobility, Immigration, Research, Remuneration, and Expat Tax needs, email info@relocationafrica.com, or call us on +27 21 763 4240.

Sources: [1], [2]. Image sources: [1], [2].  

Courtesy of Klug Law Firm.

On November 23, 2020, U.S. District Judge Jeffrey S. White heard arguments focused on a single question: Did the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and Department of Labor (DOL) have “good cause” to bypass standard rulemaking procedures and publish emergency regulations to restrict H-1B visas? The plaintiffs – businesses and universities led by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce – argued case law, economic data and the Trump administration’s actions show good cause did not exist. The DOL rule took effect on October 8, 2020, and the DHS rule is effective December 7, 2020, unless blocked. The plaintiffs are asking the court to vacate both regulations.

The Administrative Procedure Act (APA) requires federal agencies to provide notice and the opportunity to comment before a regulation goes into effect. The Trump administration published the DHS and DOL H-1B rules “interim final” and claimed “good cause” reasons existed that justified the agencies publishing the regulations (and allowing them to go into effect) before allowing the public to comment. This is the central dispute between businesses and universities and the Trump administration in U.S. Chamber of Commerce et al. v. DHS et al. – whether the economic situation created by the coronavirus pandemic provides DHS and DOL with a “good cause” exception for its actions.

Paul Hughes of McDermott Will & Emery, the lead counsel for plaintiffs in the Chamber lawsuit, emphasized the high stakes during the November 23rd hearing. “We think this is an overt attempt to destroy the H-1B program,” said Hughes, and several company executives and university leaders provided declarations to that effect. Zane Brown said, “Many of Amazon’s most tenured employees,” including data scientists and software engineers, would have to leave the United States. At the same time, Hughes cited the reliance issue for the University of Utah and its 350 H-1B visa holders, five hospitals and 12 clinics. The university’s attorney said the DHS rule would cause “substantial irreparable harm.”

Hughes also cited the Trump administration as a source. Ken Cuccinelli at the Department of Homeland Security said up to 200,000 H-1B professionals could lose their jobs under the rule. The Department of Labor estimated its rule, which inflates H-1B wage requirements by 40% or more, would cost employers $198 billion over 10 years, making it potentially the most expensive regulation imposed on businesses in modern U.S. history, based on an analysis by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

During the court hearing, held via Zoom, the Trump administration did not offer strong responses to arguments plaintiffs put forward in their reply brief or in court. Below are the arguments central to the case.

First, at the hearing, Paul Hughes noted the DHS and DOL rules failed to connect the H-1B visa category to the coronavirus-related economic problems. He pointed to a National Foundation for American Policy (NFAP) analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics data that showed: “The U.S. unemployment rate for individuals in computer occupations stood at 3.5% in September 2020, not changed significantly from the 3% unemployment rate in January 2020 (before the pandemic spread in the U.S.).” Hughes also noted from the NFAP analysis that there were over 655,000 active job vacancy postings advertised online in computer occupations in the United States as of October 2, 2020.

The data cited by Hughes was available to DHS and DOL before issuing the rules, along with DHS statistics that show most H-1B visa holders work in computer occupations. Hughes successfully litigated for a preliminary injunction against the Trump administration’s June 2020 proclamation (which restricted the entry of H-1B, L-1 and other visa holders). In granting the preliminary injunction in October (NAM v. DHS), Judge White cited NFAP research and other evidence indicating Covid-19 unemployment problems were not focused in computer jobs. During the November 23rd hearing, Hughes noted the government had an even higher burden of proof to show a “good cause” exception for its two recent rules than the standard it used to defend (unsuccessfully) the president’s authority to issue the June 2020 proclamation.

Second, the Trump administration’s attorney offered a limited response to the plaintiffs’ point that DHS and DOL did not address the lack of connection to H-1B visas and coronavirus-related unemployment. The government’s attorney repeated the argument in the DHS rule that the unemployment rate had increased in the Information sector and the Professional and Business Services sector. Hughes responded, citing the National Foundation for American Policy report, that these “sectors” include all employees of a company – and only approximately 10% of the jobs (computer occupations with a B.S. or higher) in the sectors are in occupations similar to professionals in the H-1B category.

The Trump administration’s attorney argued DHS was focused on the “health of the sectors.” Yet that argument appeared weak in light of the impact of the DHS and DOL rules: How would imposing $198 billion in additional regulatory costs on companies in these sectors improve the “health of the sectors”?

Third, the administration also did not appear to successfully respond to the plaintiffs’ argument that DHS and DOL waited more than 6 months to issue rules after the national unemployment rate reached its height in April 2020. “Courts routinely reject claims of good cause when an agency delays promulgating a rule in the face of an emergency and then claims that that very emergency leaves no time for notice and comment – just as the agencies have done here,” the plaintiffs argued in a reply brief. (The plaintiffs cited Air Transp. Ass’n of Am. v. DOT.)

The administration’s attorney said the agency was looking at the pace of recovery and long-term unemployment. Hughes argued DHS did not cite long-term unemployment in its rule, and DOL would have known about long-term unemployment as a consequence months ago. Besides, plaintiffs argued, the unemployment rate has improved significantly since April.

Hughes argued the two rules were on the administration’s agenda for years, and the emergency was the 2020 election (i.e., not an acceptable reason for a “good cause” exception). He also noted to make its case on unemployment, the administration cited an article back on March 27, 2020, but that since that time, DHS and DOL had published several rules that had nothing to do with H-1B visas, further evidence of a lack of emergency that warrants a good cause exception.

Fourth, the Department of Labor stated in its rule that companies would rush to submit labor condition applications (LCAs) under the rules in place for the past 16 years if companies had “[a]dvance notice of the intended changes.” Alexandra Saslaw, representing the administration, argued, “This is a case where the agency [DOL] has significant expertise regulating businesses, and they’re using their predictive judgment to determine what those businesses might do in response to a very clear economic incentive.”

Hughes responded that precedent shows “predictive judgment alone” is not enough for an agency. There also has to be evidence. More pointedly, Hughes said, “We don’t think this argument advances the government’s position because it relies on the notion that they had to keep the DOL rule change a secret, but the government didn’t keep it a secret.” He pointed out not once, but twice, the Trump administration declared it intended the Department of Labor to impose a rule virtually identical to the rule it published. The first time came in a press call with reporters on June 22nd and the second time, on August 2nd, the president mentioned the upcoming regulation during an Oval Office media event.

It is never easy to block government regulations by convincing a court to vacate them. On behalf of the plaintiffs, Paul Hughes appeared to make the stronger legal and factual arguments. Judge White will decide if what plaintiffs describe as an “overt attempt to destroy the H-1B program” will be stopped.

 

For information as to how Relocation Africa can help you with your Mobility, Immigration, Research, Remuneration, and Expat Tax needs, email info@relocationafrica.com, or call us on +27 21 763 4240.

Sources: [1], [2]. Image sources: [1], [2].