by odegaard » Tue 21 Apr 2009, 12:50:09
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('patience', 'I')n the early 1980's, I worked as an engineer in an auto parts plant in Indiana, and visited a sister factory in Ontario, same company. My counterpart there could not afford to own both a car and a house, as a young married man. He owned a car, an older Camaro, and his parents owned a house where he and his wife lived. He was a sensible, frugal fellow, very careful with his money. He made about $20,000 Canadian at the time, and I made about $28,000 US then, with all medical insurance paid. With an exchange rate of 70 %, his wages were about $14,000 US--half what I made. He visited our plant, and read newspaper ads, went to stores here and saw that prices were the same or less in the US compared to what he was used to in Canada. Very tough times for him there. He moved to Vancouver and did a lot better soon after that, but the taxes still ate up about half his income, if I remember rightly.
I think things have gotten better for the Canadians since then, and truly hope so. Fine people that I respect a lot. But I do not wish to live under their system of taxation.
I've never lived outside of the USA but I have heard plenty of stories from people, mainly from relatives who've lived in western Europe for awhile.
Can I say this without inciting a rebellion? MOST Americans are *ignorant* of how good they have it.
From a distance Europe (I assume Canada has a similar standard of living) seems like it's one step ahead of us.
We are constantly reminded by the media of the pretty high speed trains, universal health care, and generous social welfare unheard of in the USA. However the biggest difference is disposable income. Europeans just don't have it.
This glaring difference shows up in every aspect of a person's life from the size of their house, number of cars if any, how many times they can afford to go to the shopping mall. One of the biggest culture shocks that a foreigner gets when they come to the USA is the shear quantity of material possessions Americans have and our ability to replace them with newer ones. Houses in Europe are half the size. Even a person of low status like a garbage man can afford to live in a single family detached house in the USA. In Britain it is not uncommon for even doctors, lawyers, and engineers to live in row houses.
Imagine if you visited a hypothetical foreign country where everybody lived in houses twice the size, have twice as many material possessions, and they replace them twice as often. It would make for an interesting culture shock huh?
