Free part time and proffesional jobs

Using a regular job search site to find jobs that you can do while you go to school is a pain. All of the sites listed here specialize in exactly the kinds of jobs you're looking for: entry-level part-time and seasonal jobs that want to hire teenagers and university students.

Free part time jobs for canadians

Using a regular job search site to find jobs that you can do while you go to school is a pain. All of the sites listed here specialize in exactly the kinds of jobs you're looking for: entry-level part-time and seasonal jobs that want to hire teenagers and university students.

Canada Part Time - Find part-time jobs, resume and interview skills information, university and post-secondary education, restaurant, retail, and hospitality part-time jobs throughout Canada.

CollegeGrad.com - Features not only jobs for recent grads, but part-time and entry-level jobs for students who are still in school.

Cool Jobs Canada - A job search site specializing in hospitality and retail jobs.

Craigslist - A classified site with listings in most major cities, divided by industry and whether you're looking for part- or full-time work. Because Craigslist is free, small companies and startups are fond of it, so you'll see jobs there that won't appear anywhere else.

jobpostings.ca - Helps university and college students and graduates find entry-level jobs and internships. Perform a job search without a login or password, or browse through sample resumes, cover letters, and interview tips.

Workopolis.com - Canada's biggest job site, with a special section for part-time and summer jobs for students.


Bilingual Service Operations Coordinator Kovasys Mississauga ON
Fire Systems Sales Representative - Siemens Building Technologies, Ltd. - Sudbury Siemens Sudbury ON
Procurement Engineer Siemens Peterborough ON
Co-op Student Assistant, Siemens Building Technologies, Ltd. - Vancouver Siemens Vancouver BC
Assistant Store Manager - RW&CO. Reitmans Fashion Group - working.com Rosemere QC
Regulatory Affairs Associate - Co-Op - 4 Month Term Cangene Winnipeg MB
Account Executive Corus Entertainment Toronto ON
Swing Announcer Corus Entertainment Vancouver BC
Traffic Coordinator (CB) Corus Entertainment Toronto ON
Data Entry Clerks - Production Services Division (P08-163) FLINT Energy Services Brooks AB
Accounting Coordinator (Halifax) Carmichael ltée Dartmouth NS
Service coordinator (Mississauga) Carmichael ltée Mississauga ON
Collection Agent Motovan Corporation Boucherville QC
Human Resources Co-ordinator Borden Ladner Gervais s.r.l. Toronto ON
eimaging Clerk Medisys Health Group - Adminjob.ca Toronto ON
Marketing Officer Parks Canada Agency - Public Service Commission of Canada Winnipeg MB
Executive Assistant Parks Canada Agency - Public Service Commission of Canada Glovertown NL
Ecological Integrity/Species at Risk (EI/SAR) Interpretation/Eduction Specialists Parks Canada Agency - Public Service Commission of Canada Winnipeg MB
Partnership Engagement Specialist Parks Canada Agency - Public Service Commission of Canada Winnipeg MB
Technicien(ne) en dotation SAQ - HRjob.ca Montreal QC
Advertising Consultants – Outside Sales Canpages Edmonton AB
Senior Sales Associate FT - Penningtons Reitmans Fashion Group - working.com Greenfield Park QC
Cosmetician - Guerlain (Part-time) Holt Renfrew Montreal QC
Sales Associate, Designer Handbags (full-time) Holt Renfrew Calgary AB
Office Services Coordinator Husky Energy St. John's NL

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credit crunch

• Canadians are now more indebted than Americans. The debt-to-disposable-income ratio in Canada currently stands at 132%, higher than the U.S ratio of 122%, according to Bank of Canada data cited by Deloitte. Canada has pulled ahead because U.S. indebtedness has fallen against disposable income since mid-2007 while Canada’s continues to rise.

• Many Canadian credit-card issuers loosened standards in recent years. Their credit card balances have increased almost 40% since 2004.

• Deloitte’s survey of credit-card executives in Canada revealed a 5% to 10% jump in delinquencies beginning last fall – which translates into annualized industry losses of more than $800 million (at the upper end).

• Credit-card companies in Canada “have traditionally seen loss rates of less than 4% – a figure much lower than that of their American counterparts (6% and growing),” but with Canadian consumers increasing their debt-to-disposable-income ratios to more than 130%, “Canadian issuers could see losses similar to those of their U.S. counterparts,” warns the Deloitte study

• Financial institutions see credit-card losses as the “canary in the coal mine.” In Canada “customers will likely default first on cards rather than on mortgages or car payments. This is converse to what has been happening in the U.S. where fairly lax mortgage default legislation has meant that people have been walking away from their houses before they have missed payments on their credit cards.”

original source http://blog.canadianbusiness.com/credit-crunch-canadian-style/

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