Kirk Yan:Head of the Melbourne branch of Newstarsec Education & Migration, an Australian licensed migration agent, with several years of experience and in-depth research on migration policy interpretation and change predictions. Editor-in-chief of the Australian Migration Weekly, he is affectionately called K God by his classmates.
On the afternoon of 11.02, New South Wales issued invitations for the second round of 190 for this fiscal year. The first thing I saw here was a transport engineer client who was invited, with a score of 80+5. He has a relevant job, and his spouse also has a professional evaluation + four 6s. Then our team searched for another hour and collected the data in Figure 1
The number of invitations is still small
After the first round, someone received a reply from the state government, saying that there were 80,000 EOI applications in their pool at that time, and it is estimated that they are rushing to 90,000 now, so most people need to adjust their mentality.
Has New South Wales also learned from Victoria’s Belt and Road Initiative?
Several overseas invitations have skilled partners
Engineering/architecture/infrastructure related occupations are available
Infrastructure is also the Target sector written in black and white in New South Wales. In the first round, there were only three treasures. This round there is more infrastructure. Will there be a computer sector in the next round? If you have more invitations, please leave me a message to share. This year, every invitation is hard-won and is an unexpected surprise.
If you have any questions about Australian migration, you can directly add Kirk’s WeChat account for consultation