And I am even one of them...Rosamunda wrote:There are THOUSANDS of foreigners working in Finland without fluent Finnish.
In some areas of IT you can find a job without speaking Finnish.
There are some jobs at universities etc.
And there are some rare odd jobs like teacher at the German school in Helsinki that do not require speaking Finnish.
The problem is that from these thousands of jobs, especially from the few ones not requiring special skills, not many are available since far too many people are competing for them.
There surely are many foreigners working in Finland (like half of the Helsinki bus drivers). But most of them are speaking Finnish, and it is not a surprise that the biggest group of foreigners in Finland are Estonians when you consider that 20% of all people in Estonia can speak Finnish.Rosamunda wrote:But there are foreigners working in all sectors of the economy from primary sector (farming, forestry, mining etc) through knowledge-based jobs (education, technology etc) to the service sector (restaurants, healthcare, cleaning services etc),
Where in the healthcare sector can you get a job without speaking Finnish? Even all the Filipino and Spanish nurses that are frequently recruited to lower the shortage of nurses in Finland have to learn the language first before they can start their work.
Same goes for the non-IT "knowledge-based jobs" (and even for the majority of IT jobs): I know quite a few people in Finland with a masters degree who would get a job if only they had a very good knowledge of the Finnish language.
Speaking of "cleaning services", even there speaking Finnish is often a requirement (I remember the city of Helsinki recently lowered the level of Finnish required from cleaners working for the city).