Anonymous wrote:2,300 people in Europe died in a 2-week span earlier this month, due to heat. Air conditioning is not widespread in many European countries:
https://news.mongabay.com/short-article/extreme-heat-kills-at-least-2300-in-european-cities-study-estimates/
This is where things like a higher GDP come into play. In the US, amenities like air conditioning and dishwashers are standard, not a luxury, because people can afford them.
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone done this recently and where did you go? I’m born and raised here and I am finding the high cost of living and poor quality of living compared to what it cost to be here unbearable at this point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My MIL, who lives in a western European country, had a skin rash. She needed to see a dermatologist when the GP couldn't do anything more for her. First she had to wait for a letter to be mailed to her house with the appointment date and time for the derm. When she received the letter, the appt date was 6 months out. Finally, once she reached that date, she had the flu and couldn't make it to the derm that day. She ended up having to wait for another letter and then another 6 months for the appt date. Meanwhile, I need to see a derm and can get in same day. Same rigamarole happens with any kind of tests..MRIs, mammos, pap smears, echos in her country. It ends up more efficient for the patient to show up at A&E in an emergency situation to get these things taken care of but then of course the A&Es are overrun and there arent any beds and staffing is a major issue too. Its no picnic and forget about dental...people in her country dont even utilize the dentist because it's such a pain to get in and pay for.,,they just go to turkey or somewhere like that where it ends up being cheaper for the flights and procedures than it would be having it done at home.
When I need to see a dermatologist in the DC area, it's a six month wait for an appointment.
Exactly. A 6 month wait if I’m lucky enough for them to be taking new patients or referrals that day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It seems like many Europeans cities have housing crises at the moment, with foreigners buying up lots of apartments in the cities. I guess small towns are easier, but it's not like most of Europe is making it super easy to move there.
I would also think seriously about the healthcare. I know it's cheaper, more accessible, but it's really not as good. My kid just had a simple MRSA infection and I was googling to get more info, and found tons of reddit threads from people in the UK asking for quick remedies because they couldn't get into see anyone for weeks. Healthcare isn't great here, but I think it's worse there. And query how the EU increased defense costs are going to impact that. I just would be reluctant to uproot my life here, where at least I'm a citizen, and move to a country where I'm always going to have some uncertainty about my status AND be far from family. (Clearly I don't have my immigrant grandparents' spirit!)
If I was going to do it, I think I'd pick Ireland, maybe something like Waterford County. It's not far from Dublin, shorter flight to US, fewer cultural barriers, and lots of cheap under utilized land.
I speak Spanish pretty well so could manage a spanish speaking country, but I think that Spain is pretty well sick of Brits and Americans moving there, and I feel like I'd either be in one of those tacky expat communities, or I'd always be "other." 30 years ago when I was backpacking through Mexico I met an American couple that ran a smoothie and breakfast place in Isla Mujeres -- that seemed like a totally great life, but that was before the island got built up by the big hotel chains. I don't know where I'd be willing to go now, between the cartel issues and all the development.
The poinr on health care is vastly overgeneralized. Europe is very diverse. Quality of care in Austria or Germany is not the same as in Greece.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My MIL, who lives in a western European country, had a skin rash. She needed to see a dermatologist when the GP couldn't do anything more for her. First she had to wait for a letter to be mailed to her house with the appointment date and time for the derm. When she received the letter, the appt date was 6 months out. Finally, once she reached that date, she had the flu and couldn't make it to the derm that day. She ended up having to wait for another letter and then another 6 months for the appt date. Meanwhile, I need to see a derm and can get in same day. Same rigamarole happens with any kind of tests..MRIs, mammos, pap smears, echos in her country. It ends up more efficient for the patient to show up at A&E in an emergency situation to get these things taken care of but then of course the A&Es are overrun and there arent any beds and staffing is a major issue too. Its no picnic and forget about dental...people in her country dont even utilize the dentist because it's such a pain to get in and pay for.,,they just go to turkey or somewhere like that where it ends up being cheaper for the flights and procedures than it would be having it done at home.
When I need to see a dermatologist in the DC area, it's a six month wait for an appointment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am hearing of people moving to Portugal. I can't manage to learn any other languages but English, and I'm jewish (and poor), but otherwise I'd leave the US too.
You need $500k invested for five yeras and competency in Portuguese.
If you're Jewish Israel will probably take you and give you a pension.
Yeah, the people I am hearing of plus the guy I know who wants to retire there easily has that much money. I can't speak Hebrew (or learn it) and wilt in the heat. So I am not sure I could do okay in Israel.
You can make it in Israel without fluency in Hebrew. My ex had several cousins move there and none spoke Hebrew. Their kids learned quickly and translated for them for years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having more than someone is not inequality. People who are lazy and less intelligent than I am do not get the economic benefits of being equal to me.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The poorest US state (Mississippi) will soon surpass the richest EU country (Germany) in GDP per capita. All other US states are ahead:
https://www.euronews.com/business/2025/01/03/the-poorest-us-state-rivals-germany-gdp-per-capita-in-the-us-and-europe
I've lived in Europe before. There's an old saying: The US is a great place to be rich, and an awful place to be poor. Europe is a great place to be poor, and an awful place to be rich.
But that statistic doesn’t address inequality. What is the median wealth/income in both places? America has some extremely wealthy people that mask the huge number of people in poverty doing averages.
If you want equality where incompetent people are given the same wages as competent, then you should emigrate to a communist country.
You will also get a government that murders and imprisons people you do not approve of.
There is no pesky constitution to give people rights that might cause inequality.
DP. That's the very definition of inequality. However, it's best to keep in mind, "Each according to their need. Each according to their ability." If you are able to work, that's great, but that doesn't entitle you to anything. The needs of those unable to work are often greater!
Equality of opportunity and a minimal safety net that allows a decent life for those who lose the genetic lottery.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having more than someone is not inequality. People who are lazy and less intelligent than I am do not get the economic benefits of being equal to me.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The poorest US state (Mississippi) will soon surpass the richest EU country (Germany) in GDP per capita. All other US states are ahead:
https://www.euronews.com/business/2025/01/03/the-poorest-us-state-rivals-germany-gdp-per-capita-in-the-us-and-europe
I've lived in Europe before. There's an old saying: The US is a great place to be rich, and an awful place to be poor. Europe is a great place to be poor, and an awful place to be rich.
But that statistic doesn’t address inequality. What is the median wealth/income in both places? America has some extremely wealthy people that mask the huge number of people in poverty doing averages.
If you want equality where incompetent people are given the same wages as competent, then you should emigrate to a communist country.
You will also get a government that murders and imprisons people you do not approve of.
There is no pesky constitution to give people rights that might cause inequality.
DP. That's the very definition of inequality. However, it's best to keep in mind, "Each according to their need. Each according to their ability." If you are able to work, that's great, but that doesn't entitle you to anything. The needs of those unable to work are often greater!
Anonymous wrote:It seems like many Europeans cities have housing crises at the moment, with foreigners buying up lots of apartments in the cities. I guess small towns are easier, but it's not like most of Europe is making it super easy to move there.
I would also think seriously about the healthcare. I know it's cheaper, more accessible, but it's really not as good. My kid just had a simple MRSA infection and I was googling to get more info, and found tons of reddit threads from people in the UK asking for quick remedies because they couldn't get into see anyone for weeks. Healthcare isn't great here, but I think it's worse there. And query how the EU increased defense costs are going to impact that. I just would be reluctant to uproot my life here, where at least I'm a citizen, and move to a country where I'm always going to have some uncertainty about my status AND be far from family. (Clearly I don't have my immigrant grandparents' spirit!)
If I was going to do it, I think I'd pick Ireland, maybe something like Waterford County. It's not far from Dublin, shorter flight to US, fewer cultural barriers, and lots of cheap under utilized land.
I speak Spanish pretty well so could manage a spanish speaking country, but I think that Spain is pretty well sick of Brits and Americans moving there, and I feel like I'd either be in one of those tacky expat communities, or I'd always be "other." 30 years ago when I was backpacking through Mexico I met an American couple that ran a smoothie and breakfast place in Isla Mujeres -- that seemed like a totally great life, but that was before the island got built up by the big hotel chains. I don't know where I'd be willing to go now, between the cartel issues and all the development.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Things are ridiculously priced here.
We just got back from visiting friends working in Japan. Kyoto, Osaka, and Tokyo all had considerably less costly drinks, restaurants, groceries, train tickets, site admissions, etc. than in DC and other cities here in America.
We were getting three course meals for lunch in a Saturday in Tokyo for $12 all in.
The Japanese yen is at an all-time low against the USD,so it was cheap for you. Now compare those costs to a typical Japanese salary.
Anonymous wrote:Things are ridiculously priced here.
We just got back from visiting friends working in Japan. Kyoto, Osaka, and Tokyo all had considerably less costly drinks, restaurants, groceries, train tickets, site admissions, etc. than in DC and other cities here in America.
We were getting three course meals for lunch in a Saturday in Tokyo for $12 all in.
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone done this recently and where did you go? I’m born and raised here and I am finding the high cost of living and poor quality of living compared to what it cost to be here unbearable at this point.