American here. If I got a bachelors in IT would I be able to find a job in Japan? If so, should I go for it?
>>18063578
My layman's opinion, absolutely not.
>>18063580
Actually, I take that back. My Mum's partner job had a job there; he's IT and American. Can you speak Japanese?
It's possible, but I don't know how practical it is these days. You may ask me more if you want.
>>18063578
can you speak japanese? if not no. you're life will be miserable
>>18063578
Highly depends on how well respected your actual college or university was imho, ofcourse if you are well spoken in the language and make some compromisses with payment and the difficulty of the work you are dealing with you might just find a job very quickly, otherwise you would still be able to go for the rather huge companies if you seem competent enough.
Then again i am just basing this on what i heard from past conversations and have no real experience to add
>>18063578
language and degree quality are the main issues. you will also find that the pay is lower and the hours longer and the work culture less forgiving than in the U.S., on average. but the cities are safer and cleaner due to the lack of niggers, and rents are cheaper than a big U.S. city for the most part. also the country is beautiful in general.