Wait for 2-3 years and try again. Appeal won't help at all.november12 wrote:Dear All,
I wanted some advice regarding my family's PR application.
Nationality : Indian
Family : Husband, Wife, 7 month old daughter born in Singapore
Household income at the time of last application : currently husband earning c.320K yearly (Banking) on PEP and wife earning c.150K yearly (Healthcare company strategy team) on EP
Both are masters degrees from very well-known Indian colleges (MBAs from IIT, IIM)
Husband staying since 2011 August, wife staying since December 2013 (married February 2013)
First application by husband alone in 2012 - got approved but he missed the date due to being out of job at that point of time.
Second Application - re-applied in June 2013 with wife but wife was working in india that time - rejected
Third application - re-applied in August 2015 with wife, husband salary 200K (with PEP), wife 100K (with LOC on DP), rejected within 2 months
Fourth application - re-applied in March 2017 with wife and daughter, husband salary 320K (PEP), wife salary 150K (EP), rejected in July 2017
I want to ask whether we should appeal or wait for 2-3 years to re-apply? Not sure what is causing these rejections. We have good education, earning well and have been constantly progressing as professionals, paying high taxes and committed to building a family in Singapore.
Changes since March 2017 application
- wife has got promoted with a salary of c.200k
- Husband has now come on EP as PEP duration of 5 years has ended
- Have passed Beginner levels 1&2 in Mandarin course run by Confucius Institute, NTU
Thanks!
Maybe Govt hope that you might leave country and some local folks get your jobsnovember12 wrote:Dear All,
I wanted some advice regarding my family's PR application.
Nationality : Indian
Family : Husband, Wife, 7 month old daughter born in Singapore
Household income at the time of last application : currently husband earning c.320K yearly (Banking) on PEP and wife earning c.150K yearly (Healthcare company strategy team) on EP
Both are masters degrees from very well-known Indian colleges (MBAs from IIT, IIM)
Husband staying since 2011 August, wife staying since December 2013 (married February 2013)
First application by husband alone in 2012 - got approved but he missed the date due to being out of job at that point of time.
Second Application - re-applied in June 2013 with wife but wife was working in india that time - rejected
Third application - re-applied in August 2015 with wife, husband salary 200K (with PEP), wife 100K (with LOC on DP), rejected within 2 months
Fourth application - re-applied in March 2017 with wife and daughter, husband salary 320K (PEP), wife salary 150K (EP), rejected in July 2017
I want to ask whether we should appeal or wait for 2-3 years to re-apply? Not sure what is causing these rejections. We have good education, earning well and have been constantly progressing as professionals, paying high taxes and committed to building a family in Singapore.
Changes since March 2017 application
- wife has got promoted with a salary of c.200k
- Husband has now come on EP as PEP duration of 5 years has ended
- Have passed Beginner levels 1&2 in Mandarin course run by Confucius Institute, NTU
Thanks!
And your friend is a Malaysian Chinese?lmw1982 wrote:One of my friend just his PR recently (first submission) with spass holder, single, far less salary than you and your wife, degree holder only and stay in Singapore less than 2 years.
Saving money here, never influenced ICAs decision, from what I know and seen.BBCDoc wrote:Are you spending your money in Singapore, or sending the bulk of it offshore or back to India? How are you both personally helping the economy? Redistributing the wealth liberally with donations?
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Yes, he is Malaysian Chinese with no blood donation and volunteer work at all.jamie9vardy wrote:And your friend is a Malaysian Chinese?lmw1982 wrote:One of my friend just his PR recently (first submission) with spass holder, single, far less salary than you and your wife, degree holder only and stay in Singapore less than 2 years.
Then he did not donate any blood or did no volunteer work?
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jamie9vardy wrote:And your friend is a Malaysian Chinese?lmw1982 wrote:One of my friend just his PR recently (first submission) with spass holder, single, far less salary than you and your wife, degree holder only and stay in Singapore less than 2 years.
Then he did not donate any blood or did no volunteer work?
Husband changed 3 jobs in last 6 years. He came here on EP in 2011 and applied PR - got PR in feb 2012 but was out of job when approval came so couldn't submit the required docs from employer on time which is why the PR formalities didn't complete. Post that he applied for PEP in 2012 and received it in October 2012.Strong Eagle wrote:Being Indian - doesn't help
Failure to take PR when offered - doesn't help
Making big bux at a multi-national bank - doesn't help
In fact, the last item can hurt. Theory is that if you are making that much money you are a senior executive. Senior executives in MNC's get transferred regularly, hence, they're not such hot candidates for _permanent_ residence... although, unlike US PR, Sing PR isn't really permanent at all... it has to be constantly renewed under ever changing rules.
If he has been in Singapore since Aug, 2011, he must have originally been on EP, and he must have been on EP when he applied for and was accepted for PR. How did he end up on PEP?
The other question I would ask is, "How many companies has he worked for"? The reason I ask relates to my first observation that MNC's transfer senior execs. If he has been moving companies in order to move up the ladder, then there may be concern that he'll move companies again, just not in Singapore.
Truly, at times I believe even the Singapore gahmen doesn't know who they want for PR... one side are the traditionalists... X percentage of each race, the kind of middle class people that will assimilate... on the other side are the revisionists... who see the need to attract more and diverse talent from all walks of life.
Maybe one of you can complete your PhD study at local University and reapply again.november12 wrote:Husband changed 3 jobs in last 6 years. He came here on EP in 2011 and applied PR - got PR in feb 2012 but was out of job when approval came so couldn't submit the required docs from employer on time which is why the PR formalities didn't complete. Post that he applied for PEP in 2012 and received it in October 2012.Strong Eagle wrote:Being Indian - doesn't help
Failure to take PR when offered - doesn't help
Making big bux at a multi-national bank - doesn't help
In fact, the last item can hurt. Theory is that if you are making that much money you are a senior executive. Senior executives in MNC's get transferred regularly, hence, they're not such hot candidates for _permanent_ residence... although, unlike US PR, Sing PR isn't really permanent at all... it has to be constantly renewed under ever changing rules.
If he has been in Singapore since Aug, 2011, he must have originally been on EP, and he must have been on EP when he applied for and was accepted for PR. How did he end up on PEP?
The other question I would ask is, "How many companies has he worked for"? The reason I ask relates to my first observation that MNC's transfer senior execs. If he has been moving companies in order to move up the ladder, then there may be concern that he'll move companies again, just not in Singapore.
Truly, at times I believe even the Singapore gahmen doesn't know who they want for PR... one side are the traditionalists... X percentage of each race, the kind of middle class people that will assimilate... on the other side are the revisionists... who see the need to attract more and diverse talent from all walks of life.
Also, can't understand the logic that for PR they want people with lower salary and qualifications just because they know they will stick around more as they won't get much choice to move out of the country? For more educated, higher earning people they fear they will move out to other countries so won't give PR? Seems a bit odd.
Wise words , hence anybody have a chance of PR as you have no idea what the thinking will be at the moment in time that your PR application come up for review.Strong Eagle wrote:
Truly, at times I believe even the Singapore gahmen doesn't know who they want for PR... one side are the traditionalists... X percentage of each race, the kind of middle class people that will assimilate... on the other side are the revisionists... who see the need to attract more and diverse talent from all walks of life.
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