Since my comment is gone, thankfully I copied and pasted it. hi nice video :). A few points about paid vacation and sick leave. The amount of vacation depends on the amount of days you work. Workers have a legally set minimum amount of Paid Vacation days they have to get according to law, companies sometimes add more to be nice. Sick days are unlimited, if you are Sick you are sick. You go to your doctor and get an AU (Arbeitsunfähigkeitsbescheinigung) he determines how long you are too sick to work. Extensions on the determined time happen if you for example have a AU for 1 week but are still sick, you go back to the doctor to get help with your condition and he can extend the amount of time you can stay home. The first 6 weeks of being unable to work as one block of time, the employer continues to pay you. After that I think you get part of your salary from your Health insurance instead. If you want to know more about Vacation just google: "Arbeitsrecht Urlaubsanspruch" And for Paid Sick days: "Arbeitsrecht Krankheit" You need to translate them, most are in german. I would have posted links but youtube deletes comments with links, or flags them for manual review. If an employee does not fully use his vacation time, the company is liable. And the BG (Berufsgenossenschaft) if they get wind of it somehow that an employee hasn't taken his full vacation, they can and will levy fines against the company or worse. Because it is your employers duty to enforce that everyone takes the full vacation.
@PiratePawsLive Жыл бұрын
@@Ramaway_ Here this KZfaq Video is interesting about the topic. It's from the CNBC. "Why does Japan work so hard? | CNBC Explains", this combined with job specialisation (we got a massive amount of specialized jobs) where people work in a certain field and not working your people to death helps too.
こんにちは らまうぇい、明けましておめでとうございます。 I had to translate it with google I hope it was understandable. Reading and writing is extremely difficult for me at the moment :). Thank you very much for the English subtitles :). Anyways I thought I'll tell you about a German family tradition (mostly families with children) around Christmas. The tradition to bake cookies together for Christmas time and most will eat them together on Advent Sundays as well as Christmas with a Cup of coffee (see "coffee and cake" tradition below). But we (my parents) tend to bake too many anyways so there are cookies until mid/end January. "Kaffee und Kuchen" (Coffee and Cake) tradition, mainly on Sunday afternoon in my experience where family and/or friends meet to drink relaxed coffee, eat cake/cookies (optional) and socialize and enjoy the relaxation :D. The Coffee and Cake tradition according to my experience, is more of a tradition which mostly my generation or older take part in (I'm 34 currently, so I would say 30+). Haven't seen many young people doing this, but I could be wrong. I did a quick search for Life Coach jobs in the Düsseldorf area and it seems most are Agile Coach (IT/Programming focus. Agile in Software Development is a iterative approach to software project management and development...) and the Health ones I saw require a completed medicine university studies (some degree in a medical field), and I worry the language barrier could be a problem. Most Jobs are for German speakers and few for English. I don't want to discourage you, just wanted to help with a bit job market research. Have a great day and I hope you reach your goals :)
Hello o/, you should be able to freely switch your electricity and gas provider as you like. And after every year your true usage will be noted by the power and gas company and they may put you in a cheaper or more expensive plan. Depending on how much you used, If you use little they put you into a cheaper bracket where you pay less if you are below certain breakpoints. My power company got plans for up to 1500 KWH, 1500-3000 KWH and 3000+ KWH used. If I use less power and reach a smaller plan I pay less fixed price and less for power per kwh. This whole procedure repeats every year with the assessment of which plan is best. I switched to "Mein Frankenstrom Öko" (my regions renewable energy plan, not available anymore to the public) and instead of paying 40,86 cent/kwh (old plan), I now got 27,98 cent/kwh all before the price hike. You can roughly add 3/4 of your old power price per kwh to it to get to the price after the price hike. Have a great Christmas time, bye.
@PiratePawsLive Жыл бұрын
@@Ramaway_ In this case I think you should ask your Landlord. I've heared of Apartments where power is part of the rent. Instead of being directly charged by the power company.
Insurgencies: If you don't have, you need a "private Haftpflichtversicherung", if something get destroyed by your fault they will pay the damage at the house. For example: You forgot to close a window and because of storm the house is now full of rain water..... 40.000€ damage, they have to pay. "Private Haftpflichtversicherung" is around 4€/month. This one don't pay for your stuff only damage at the house. Additional you should have a "Hausratversicherung", this one pays your destroyed stuff if something happens. So if the house burns down and all you stuff is gone you are (financial) save. This one is around 3€/month. Kitchen: Yes, it is annoying. Normally you buy the kitchen that is inside and when you move out you sell it for the same price to the next one. This is a problem for young people without rich parents, because you pay the Broker Fee , 2 net cold rent than the deposit 2 net cold rent and than you have to buy the kitchen. So you need minimum. So you need ~5k€ only to move in and than you haven't payed a single moth.
Like everywhere it's all about the money. This are good news for you because income in Japan (especially after taxes) is much higher than in Germany. I work in real estate sector, you can calculate for a flat in a good area 14€/m²-16€/m² + ~3,50€/m²(追加費用), this would be inside the city. Düsseldorf in general is not the most expensive city but still expensive. For a house like this in the suburbs you pay lesser for a m² but of course it's bigger so more m² and more 追加費用. Usual you calculate 45m² for 1 person. Even social benefit pays you a 45m² Apartment. Broker Permission: Investment company's don't by "1 Family houses". The law say if you have a Broker, you have to pay the same fee like the renter. As I said, the most houses are private persons property and not company and they often save the money for a Broker and do it by them self. Broker Fee is usual 2x net cold rent. If you can speak English or have a translator for minimum English you should not have problems to find something, as log you can pay it. Addition: DON'T MOVE TO EAST GERMANY!
@maximmaxim613 Жыл бұрын
とても美味しそう👍
@peter_meyer Жыл бұрын
Regarding the street lights: As long as you step on the street while it is green, you should be safe. Don't worry.
@ikdante5597 Жыл бұрын
Are you based in Germany?
@yasminesteinbauer8565 Жыл бұрын
Very nice, relaxing video!😄 Did the Japanese food taste different from the food in Japan? Or was it similar?
@PiratePawsLive Жыл бұрын
A warm welcome from me too, and I wish you both the best :). I hope Japan opens up to foreigners again soon, since I wanted to visit for 20 years now to experience the culture, locations and people. Sadly I heard from other youtubers that the locals are since the pandemic very wary and not so welcoming anymore to foreigners :(. Have fun in Germany (>o.o)>
@PiratePawsLive Жыл бұрын
@@Ramaway_ No problem with the masks :). Subbed and hope to see more videos soon, I use them to help me with Japanese listening comprehension skills and the videos are interesting. :) I prefer non tourist places since I live in a tourist city and like to experience a bit of actual life like the locals and explore^^. Have a nice day
Thank you so much for providing some translations. So we can get some information which I find very interesting. As you have mentioned it is not easy to find an affordable flat in our bigger cities. Thus I hope you will find a suitable apartment where you can stay permanently (and not only for three months). Please keep us informed about that topic.