Originally posted by raja
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Re: Ex-Pat Thread
Nice map! It keeps coming back to Uruguay for its culture, in spite of its cost of living not being as low as other countries. D&G's incredibly generous offer is hard to top. Or there's Salto. From what I've read it's considered a walkable city, is surrounded by farms and abundant water (this has become a big deal for me after living in deserts for 30 years) and has a lower cost of living than Montevideo. I would save a lot of money every month just by not having a car.
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Re: Ex-Pat Thread
A friend of mine has just gone this route, including up in the hills.He's been in the music biz most of his life and like all the arts, payoffs are few and far between. His savings, keeping his hand in music when he can, and SS are his monetary means. His Spanish is excellent, having grown up in Mexico City - his Dad worked for the agency and was stationed there. He's optimistic.I would think Panama might be your choice, but up in the hills, not at sea level.
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Re: Ex-Pat Thread
The most dangerous countries:

http://www.theatlantic.com/internati...n-maps/274593/
Anywhere there are people, there will trouble when times get hard.
I think the best solution is to live in a geographically isolated country that is presently safe, within a local community of good people who accept you, and are near self-sufficiency, i.e., farmers.
Europe is too diverse.
New Zealand might be good, but I don't know much about it.
The US is my choice, partly because of familiarity and the social structure, but I wouldn't want to live in the cities.
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Re: Ex-Pat Thread
Well, If you can handle the heat and humidity, and though I have never been there, I would think Panama might be your choice, but up in the hills, not at sea level.
I think that because it uses the dollar, there are Americans there (plenty of them), lots of foreign investment, should have cheap local food like most of central/south america, and they have a very significant resource -- the Panama Canal. Thus they have 'power' in trade to get what they need.
Next up I would probably pick Mexico. Again, get out of the tourist traps and it is cheap, there are enough 'mericans there you are not that odd, and they have oil. They benefit from trade, are sort of under the US protectorate umbrella as our southern neighbor, and in a medical emergency you can get home fairly easily for US healthcare. Similarly you could consider Puerto Rico, though I tend to shy away from islands due to the cost of imports. That too is a US 'protectorate' as part of the US, so easy to live there as an American, but far enough removed from the mainland to be away from some of the security state insanity.
If you need more three season weather you are looking at Chile, Argentina or Uruguay. Chile is expensive all around, Uruguay is expensive for imports, but not so ridiculous for local stuff. HC may be expensive for you depending on age. Argentina is a total mess. In a sense that is good and it is bad. It is good, because the people learn to get around the government where possible, so you can move there and overstay your tourist visa for YEARS, and only pay a very small fine if you leave. your dollar will go VERY far nowadays. And if yo livve out of Buenos Aires you can live quite cheaply, but again imports will be very expensive as will a car. Public transit is very cheap. they have some oil there. Finally Uruguay is cheap for food, expensive for imports, free to live if you want one of my houses on a farm (no internet at the house) and are willing to clean it out. Electric can be expensive. Public transit is avge cost.
If you don't mind being an outsider my understanding is Costa Rica is cheap to live out of the tourist traps, and local food is very cheap as well. From what I have seen land and a small house is cheap too. Belize is supposed to be similar, though I know not for sure. Nicaraugua and Hondouras are cheap as well. People in both countries tend to be very poor and there is a lot of property crime.
I don;t know much about the rest of SOuth American countries. You may want to poke around and ask questions here: http://www.expat-blog.com/
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Re: Ex-Pat Thread
They say if you want the right answers you have to ask the right questions, and these are great questions.Originally posted by doom&gloom View PostThe question boils down to a few issues about you personally:
1) how are your language skillsi f you choose a foreign language based country?
2) how do you deal with new cultures?
3) can you move with blank expectations? are you adaptable?
As I recall money is tight for you. So with that in mind, lets take a world tour quickly.
Lets take all of Latin America for example. It is certainly not homogenous. Each country is different, and even parts of each country are different just like the US.
You can live quite cheaply in Ecuador, but you will never 'blend' anywhere. You will always be an outsider. In Uruguay you can blend, as even a huge 'gringo' (they do not use that word there) like me can 'blend' as they have a few areas of germanic settlement where the people look like me. In Brasil, they look like the US, people from all over the world. In Mexico you would clearly be a gringo, but there are a lot of gringos in some parts of Mexico and they are a big part of the local economy so well accepted. In Argenina you can blend, as well as in Chile. In Costa Rica you would never blend, and the ticos there will always treat you as an outsider even if they are nice to you. Panama has lots of 'mericans, especially in Panama City and the canal zone, so you can sort of blend in there. They use the $USD and are pretty tied to us as well. Other countries like Columbia, Venezuele etc are not very high on the American expat lists.
You could try and move to Australia or NZ, but I believe neither would allow you permanent residence, and both are expensive. Most all of the EU is expensive, and the fringe countries and former Soviet Satellites have off languages to learn of no value beyond their own borders. Africa is pretty much out -- you will never blend anywhere but South Afrika, which is not even remotely safe. And you will never blend in Asia, though you could live and probably be accepted in Thailand, Singapore, Hong Kong, and maybe Malaysia.
So if your standards and income are not that high, you are really looking at Latin America.
How's your spanish? Are you language adept or willing to learn?
How are you with new environments? Could you pick up and move to anywhere in the US even now and start a new base of friends and activities on a moments notice? Do you make friends easily? Do you even need friends, as some do not.
What is your living standard? Travelling by bus, bike and walking okay to save money? Or is a car a necessity? Happy with a day at the beach and a homemade sandwich and can of soda? Or do you need nice restaurants and cafes?
Do you need to work, or will you live off Social Security?
This kind of stuff is much more intrinsic to each person that the generality of moving. My wife knows I could move almost anywhere and be happy. She not so much.
that all siad, I certainly sympathize with your concerns over the Su 'security state'. It is why I invest on two continents and two countries.
I'm studying Spanish now. Won't move to Latin American unless I'm reasonably fluent. Budget is tight- shooting for under $1200/month including health care. How will prices in these Latin American economies respond to PCO and the US$ convulsions that are ahead? Some of these countries actually use the US$ for their currency.
It'd be nice to live where I don't need a car. Good buses and markets close by, with the weather mild enough to walk most days.
I've lived in a dirt floor dugout with a wood stove and a badly built composting toilet and was grateful to have a roof over my head. I currently live in a 14x52 mobile home and am grateful to have a roof over my head that's bought and paid for. I think I'm pretty adaptable and not nearly as spoiled as many Americans, but who knows? It's been a long time since I traveled further than Albuquerque.
I toured Italy, Greece, Paris and London when I was 15. Absolutely loved the fact that restaurants served room temperature water without ice. The only thing that threw me was the toilets at a park on Mykonos. Our park guide was so proud of their newly remodeled bathrooms. I opened the stall door to find beautifully tiled holes in the floor. Culture shock can be pretty funny sometimes!
I'm comfortable as a hermit, don't need a lot of people around or constant things to do. As long as I can connect with my few close friends through the internet I'm OK.
I don't like big, creepy crawly bugs though. Absolutely loathe giant cockroaches and Florida palmetto bugs, scorpions and centipedes. The humid tropics would give me a permanent case of the willies.
Healthwise, I can't live at high altitude and can't be around perfumes or fragrance chemicals. Is the rest of the world as heavily fragranced as the USA, with its scented soaps, shampoos, hair gels, laundry products, air "fresheners" and cleaning products? Or is it worse? (one of my fantasies is that people will become so poor in the coming years that they'll stop buying all that cr*p and go back to using plain soap, baking soda and vinegar for everything. Then I won't feel poisoned every time I go out.)
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Re: Ex-Pat Thread
The question boils down to a few issues about you personally:
1) how are your language skillsi f you choose a foreign language based country?
2) how do you deal with new cultures?
3) can you move with blank expectations? are you adaptable?
As I recall money is tight for you. So with that in mind, lets take a world tour quickly.
Lets take all of Latin America for example. It is certainly not homogenous. Each country is different, and even parts of each country are different just like the US.
You can live quite cheaply in Ecuador, but you will never 'blend' anywhere. You will always be an outsider. In Uruguay you can blend, as even a huge 'gringo' (they do not use that word there) like me can 'blend' as they have a few areas of germanic settlement where the people look like me. In Brasil, they look like the US, people from all over the world. In Mexico you would clearly be a gringo, but there are a lot of gringos in some parts of Mexico and they are a big part of the local economy so well accepted. In Argenina you can blend, as well as in Chile. In Costa Rica you would never blend, and the ticos there will always treat you as an outsider even if they are nice to you. Panama has lots of 'mericans, especially in Panama City and the canal zone, so you can sort of blend in there. They use the $USD and are pretty tied to us as well. Other countries like Columbia, Venezuele etc are not very high on the American expat lists.
You could try and move to Australia or NZ, but I believe neither would allow you permanent residence, and both are expensive. Most all of the EU is expensive, and the fringe countries and former Soviet Satellites have off languages to learn of no value beyond their own borders. Africa is pretty much out -- you will never blend anywhere but South Afrika, which is not even remotely safe. And you will never blend in Asia, though you could live and probably be accepted in Thailand, Singapore, Hong Kong, and maybe Malaysia.
So if your standards and income are not that high, you are really looking at Latin America.
How's your spanish? Are you language adept or willing to learn?
How are you with new environments? Could you pick up and move to anywhere in the US even now and start a new base of friends and activities on a moments notice? Do you make friends easily? Do you even need friends, as some do not.
What is your living standard? Travelling by bus, bike and walking okay to save money? Or is a car a necessity? Happy with a day at the beach and a homemade sandwich and can of soda? Or do you need nice restaurants and cafes?
Do you need to work, or will you live off Social Security?
This kind of stuff is much more intrinsic to each person that the generality of moving. My wife knows I could move almost anywhere and be happy. She not so much.
that all siad, I certainly sympathize with your concerns over the Su 'security state'. It is why I invest on two continents and two countries.
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Re: Ex-Pat Thread
Check out this thread, start by xPat
http://www.itulip.com/forums/showthr...leaving-USA%29
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X-Pat Thread
Some of us have expressed interest in moving to another country for retirement. Let's start a discussion about the pros and cons, and how various countries will fare in a PCO world. Link to articles and blogs if you find good ones to share.
I'm curious about cost-of-living, quality of life (including climate and health care), economic and political stability, levels of crime and corruption, privacy, human rights and how well they respect the rule of law.
What are the country's natural resources, and are they developing them? Is it self-sufficient in food production? How's its water outlook? What is its debt level? How will it fare when POOM happens in the USA, and when/if the IMS cracks up in 2019 as EJ forecasts?
What are the country's policies on foreigners owning land? How stable is their banking system? Will they open bank accounts for USA citizens? What about taxes?
What is their policy on bringing in gold, or a car, or personal possessions?
Currently looking at Central and South America. These two blogs seem more grounded and practical than the usual fare: Paradise Uruguay and Uruguay Expat Life
Colombia and Ecuador have a lower cost of living than Uruguay, but I don't know how they compare in other ways. Uruguay seems very peaceful and stable, but it has to import all its oil. Colombia is an oil exporter. ALL have affordable health care.
EJ has expressed the opinion that we'll be better off here in the USA when the fan is hit. He might be right. But I am increasingly uneasy living in what feels more and more like a gilded police state. I'm willing to trade great plumbing and 500 brands of laundry detergent for a life without the TSA, the Patriot Act, NDAA, Obamacare, drones, etc. I think that a society where people are comfortable getting by with less might fare better in a PCO world than a spoiled society that has lost its self-reliance and is rapidly losing its civility. I could very well be wrong about this and welcome discussion.Tags: None
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