BeAChooser
Banned
- Joined
- Jun 20, 2007
- Messages
- 11,716
14days vs. 37days vacation
Yeah, all of which you'll spend on those crowded, rocky French beaches rather than on America's glorious, sandy, relatively uncrowded California beaches … all because you made a trade … $12,000 less per capita GDP for $3000 in lower health care costs. Leave it to the French.
Oh … you want to know another part of that tradeoff? The average size of homes you French can afford, when you're not at the beach, compared to those in the US. According to http://www.gainesville.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070523/WIRE/705230320/-1/news , American homes, on average, are nearly twice as large as those in Europe. In fact, apparently only tiny Luxembourg comes close, with average homes that are (wow!) three-quarters the size of those in the US.
Want more tradeoffs?
16%GDP health care vs. 11% or less
A difference of 5%. Yet the per capita GDP in the US is 35% higher than in France. Tradeoffs, tradeoffs.
I have no problem getting paid less for higher quality of life.
And how is quality of life measured?
By how happy the citizens are on average?
Let's see … here's a very recent study by the OECD (so it shouldn't be biased towards Americans) that ranks various societies on the basis of various indicators. Let's look at the "life satisfaction" indicator, which seems to me akin to "happiness". The US comes in 11th in the ranking of 140 countries with a life satisfaction index of about 8.3 while France comes in 14th with an index of only about 8. So not only do the French get paid less but in terms of "life satisfaction" they score lower. How about work satisfaction? The US comes in 8th. France comes in 19th.
Here's another study on happiness that ranks various countries. http://www.thehappinessshow.com/HappiestCountries.htm . The US ranks 15th. France ranks 25th.
If you aren't as happy, on average, as we are, why do you say your quality of life is better?