Ask Slashdot: What's the Best Place To Relocate?
New submitter tsakas writes: "I am an IT researcher from southern Europe looking for a good place to relocate. Markets are pulling the teeth out of the strong European countries by destroying the south. The U.S. is in debt and there is no way of telling how long this can go on. China and India are on the rise. Brazil and Australia are looking good. The question: Which city would you choose to go and start a family if you were to stay there for a) 5, b) 10 and c) 20 years?"
Google Fiber
The US - still the best place to live and the whole "debt" issue is really not a huge deal.
http://www.openmint.net/masdar-city-green-living-experiment Masdar is the worlds first attempt at a completely energy neutral city.
Regardless of what order you list the cities and/or countries today, you would have a completely different list in 5, again in 10 and yet another in 20. I'd say your pick should be based on the culture you're most comfortable with.
Personally, I'd stay the heck away from India and China. I would leave if I were in either place. Both countries have serious infrastructure issues. And I would not want to live in a slave state ( China ), regardless if they seem to be opening up. That is only for the well connected. The working slobs have it worse than anywhere else in the wolrd. Hong Kong is an exception, but that is slowly fading.
why are you relocating? if you fear for the wellbeing of your family you should know the health insurance for american workers is generally inferior to that of many european nations especially when considering their family coverage. The public education is routinely inferior as well, and 40 hours per week for tech workers is conservative in many cases. You arent going to see much more than 1-2 weeks of vacation in the first year in the states, and several of the southern states are sadly virulently xenophobic.
can you clarify on what you mean by markets pulling the teeth out of strong european countries? You make it seem like you've simply become jaded by a spate of recent financial reforms. Strong Europeans are the backbone of strong European countries, so if you and others leave it simply leaves more room to turn the EU into a libertarian dystopia.
Good people go to bed earlier.
Singapore. I worked there for two weeks at the Marina Bay Sands project. English is the primary language, the area is beautiful and clean. Hated coming home. I'd still move my wife and kids there in a second.
The economy here isn't bad at all and it's quite peaceful, even in the capital Stockholm. :)
Sweden's definitely a great place to start a family as the society do a lot for the parents (compared to many countries).
I moved there a year ago and I have no regret at all
Oh, and Swedish isn't that difficult to learn at all, you'll be just fine speaking English until you learn it!
Bonus: if you haven't found a spouse yet, I can say that there are some really beautiful girls here too ;)
It's funny how people from Western countries with ridiculously lax immigration procedures go abroad, expecting every country to be just like their own. They are shocked, shocked to find out that a visa is a sovereign act of a nation and it is that country's choice to set the rules.
Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
We are not. No education to speak of, a government which is making the same mistakes which resulted in the European crisis, lots of crime and violence. Also we are more and more becoming an exporter of commodities, because our tax system is totally regressive and cumulative, working against manufacturing and services by making everything very, very expensive — and we have lower salaries than those of the First World.
I lived in Europe. Only reason I did not stay was that I was not allowed to.
Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
I hail from Australia, and always felt that I was in a very small country with limited opportunities, despite everything going for it. Probably a fantastic country to raise kids or retire, but the economy isn't as big, and there aren't as many opportunities as, say, the US or UK.
I wanted out, because I wanted to swim in a bigger pond. It was a tossup between the US and the UK, and because I had an easy visa (something you might like to consider), I just went to London. The UK has big social problems (even more than the US, it has a huge, feral, festering underclass, and I get the impression that the UK is a *BAD* place to be down on your luck), but if you're good at what you do, you can probably afford to live in a good areas and send your kids to decent schools and generally stay away from all the shit. London is a huge, bustling, dynamic place that's fairly close by, and there's something here for just about everyone (unless you're poor, of course).
You're southern European, as you say, so don't forget that you have EU treaty rights. There are plenty of options for relocation within Europe.
That said, you wouldn't want to retire here. I certainly don't plan on sticking around past retirement.
source:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/howaboutthat/9475307/London-slips-down-list-of-best-cities-despite-glorious-Olympics.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World's_most_livable_cities
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
It depends on which way you go about it. The usual one, where you apply for permanent residency from outside the country... yeah, good luck with waiting for the backlog there. On the other hand, the provincial nominee program (PNP), where you get in the country on a regular work visa, work for a year, and then apply for PR, is still a reasonably fast and simple way to get PR and then citizenship. Less problem with "oversubscribing" there because there are far fewer people who can get a work visa to begin with, and once you're in, you go on a priority track. And you don't have to worry about visa terms, since, once you've applied for PNP, if your work visa expires you can extend it essentially indefinitely and make it open (i.e. not tied to a particular employer) until you get a final judgment on your PR.
Case in point: it took me ~2 years to get PR, starting from early 2010. This is for BC, so I don't know how other provinces fare in comparison - I'd expect the backlog to be somewhat bigger in Ontario and Quebec, and about the same in Alberta.
India and Australia speak English.
My God can beat up your God. Just kidding...don't take offense. I know there's no God.
If by "Europe" is doing badly you must surely mean the Eurozone. Unemployment in Norway/Sweden/even formerly bankrupt Iceland is very good. If you're having kids, the 2 months mandatory paternity leave in Sweden would be nice. You'd get to spend time with your kids and not have to work all the time and it allows your spouse to keep a career too. The governments themselves are very stable with the lowest levels of corruption in the world (if only Greece could say the same!), allowing the high tax rate to give you a decent rate of return on services you receive.
In short, it's the southern European welfare state on steroids but done responsibly.
-- Political fascism requires a Fuhrer.
Montreal is definitely NOT the place to be in IT.
Political instability - the separatist Parti Quebecois is leading in the polls and the election is less than a month away. And there's the nightly anti-gov't demonstations.
Debt, debt and MORE debt - if Quebec were to separate, it would be as indebted as Italy, Ireland, Greece or Spain;
It used to have the 2nd-highest taxes in the western world, but with the last 2 tax increases now ranks #1;
regressive taxation caused by failure to index taxes for a generation. Someone earning the minimum wage pays more in provincial taxes (base rate starts at 16.5% to the province) than someone making $40,000 per year in Ontario 100 miles to the west (base rate 5.05%, larger base exemption, fewer mandatory levies). Even Alberta's flat 10% tax rate is much better;
Language laws - your kids won't be allowed to attend english schools unless YOU attended an English school in either Quebec or somewhere else in Canada. English schools outside the country don't count.
More taxes coming up next year, even though taxation has now passed the theoretical tipping point, and the last increase resulted in a dollar-for-dollar loss of economic activity in the first 3 months of 2012;
Crime and corruption - street shootings are becoming a daily occurrence, despite guns being banned.
Most corrupt western government in the world since at least 1991 - corruption is now estimated to cost every taxpayer $500 per year. In other words, Quebec would not be running a deficit if it weren't for corruption (and with the highest taxes anywhere, it SHOULDN'T be running a deficit - especially since it also receives over 8 BILLION a year in equalization payments, mostly from Alberta - that's $100 per person per month in govt welfare, not counting the $850 million in excess DEI payments, and the billions in indirect subsides).
The "multi-cultural" is not really - official gov't policy is that "les autres" ("the others", immigrants) should be assimilated into the "French Fact" (and this despite the fact that the "French Fact" is unsustainable - what are you going to do, ban the Internet, satellite TV, English music and movies, etc? You could force every kid into french-only schooling, and french will still be a dead language within 2 generations);
Decades of under-funded health care (diverting federal grants, on a dollar-for-dollar basis, to other programs) and education;
A demographic time bomb that over the next decade will explode, as the number of seniors grows faster than pretty much anywhere else; already, the system is dependent on illegal workers making less than the minimum wage (I know people who are working for $4/hour) to contain costs.
Nobody I've spoken to outside of Quebec gives a sh*t any more - if Quebec wants to separate, good riddance. The rest of the country (7 provinces with 50% of the population minimum) has the right to hold a constitutional meeting and reset Quebec's borders to what they were at confederation (costing Quebec most of its' territory).
And the "Plan Nord? What a joke - "Up to 20,000 jobs!!!" Hey, Quebec lost more than that in just one MONTH.
Giorgo, is that you?
On a more serious tone, and as others pointed out above, you should have provided us with more clues. Relocating is an issue with lots of variables that vary strongly in each case. Having said that, all tips that one can give you can only be vague/anecdotal at best. Here are mine:
1. I am Greek working in Germany for 7 years now. Whether you can feel safe economically here strongly depends on who you work for. I work for a large chemical company (>15.000 employes worldwide) and can't complain. However, we now hire only if we explicitly need to fill a vacant place.
2. My Greek family and friends from my school/university years are all over the globe: Germany, Canada, Australia, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Brazil, UK. Those that are still in Greece plan to go away. However, this should come as no surprise. Greeks always had the tendency to migrate (also for no apparent reason) and this can only be enhanced by an economic crisis.
3. Strangely, some friends that were in USA came back (before the crisis broke out). Personal reasons also came into play, but it seemed that the conditions in the USA were not overwhelmingly good so as to encourage their stay.
4. In Australia you first need to get a well paying job in order to qualify for a visa. You can't go there looking for a job as many would imagine. This is likely to be valid for other countries as well.
My 2 cents.
Have been to the UK, and most of Europe, have lived in the US and in the Congo.
While there are parts of the USA that are nice, on the whole I'll stick with Canada, thanks. Of course our current government really would like to turn Canada into the USA, while I think we'd be better off with a bit less of a gap between haves and have-nots.