Although i am not a Canadian neither have i studied in York or UofT, i have done thorough research on them and will try to help you out.
P.s. you have not mentioned how many years you have completed over here.
1) Universities and Fees:
I would suggest you not to go for credits transfer into bachelors because they always give you lower credits than what you have studied for. Previous year, a friend of mine applied (for engineering) and was given half the credits after a rigorous 6 months of process and wasting almost 100k. Though if you have the money to throw and don't mind wasting a year, then go for it.
Pros:
You will have spent in between 1-3 years (i will guess 2) over there completing your Bachelors and then if you go for another 1-2 years Masters program, by the time you are done, you will have been residing in Canada for 3-4 years altogether. Most Bachelors in Canada have co-op work terms included as part of the program and hence you will gain Canadian experience (which Canadians deem really important for jobs over there) as well as earn (co-op students are paid proper salaries). So due to that, you will also get a work permit for anywhere between 1-4 years (might even be 0) depending on the rules at that time. And after having spent so many years there, you can apply for PR during the while you start working there.
I always say if one has the money, one should go abroad for Bachelors and do Masters as well. You will be guaranteed a job and PR. And i am not just talking about a particular country here. I favour going right after A Levels/Intermediate and doing your entire Bachelors there.
Cons:
Bachelors
University fee: $18,000 per year * 2=$36,000
Living expenses: $18,000 per year * 2=$36,000
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Masters
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1) Schulich MBA (16 months): University fee: $60,000
Living expenses: $30,000
2) Rotman MBA (24 months): University fee: $94,000
Living expenses: $60,000
P.s. Living expenses are different for both because as suggested by the universities themselves. It is obvious if you are going to go to UofT, they will have charge more for accommodation and other services especially to MBA students.
Hence, if you go to York, you will spend approx. $162,000 (1.30 million rupees) and if you go to University of Toronto, you will spend approx $226,000 (1.80 million rupees)
Facts:
1) In Canada, University of Toronto is the most well-known university and best by many standards. However, York is famous for it's Schulich Business School.
2) UofT's MBA as well as salary is ranked higher than that of York's MBA.
3) York's MBA is a 16 months program as compared to UofT's 24 months. Hence you will save 8 months. York's estimated living costs are also cheaper at $22,500 per year ($30,000 per year for UofT).
2) Employment/Work:
As for a 'job', i don't know if you are aware or not, but International students can only work 20 hours a week during their academic terms and full time during their vacations at 'odd-jobs'. But since the programs have co-op terms, those are during the vacations and hence being 'allowed' to work full time doesn't matter then. Minimum legal salary is $9-9.75 per hour. Hence in a month you can earn a minimum $760. But i would stress that studying at UofT is not an easy task and you would hardly be able to manage those odd-jobs as well. So even expect not working at all during a week.
3) Financial Aid/Assistance:
Although there are have many financing options available, international students are restricted to
few financing aids such as Scholarships, Fellowships & Awards, Teaching Assistantships (TA) and Research Assistantships. Though i would STRICTLY advise you not to rely on them as they are not certain and are really competitive.
I would say look into matters such as time and money involved, what difference will it make behind you at your home (family needs you), return on investment (post-graduation work availability and salary) and chance of getting Permanent Residence status (virtually certain if you do Masters from both universities).
Make the right decision. Good luck with your future endeavours.