Comfortable, leisurely, pleasant stagnation is just not good enough for the modern age.
Which society is a better place to live: the U.S., or Europe? This is a very difficult question, for several reasons. For one thing, “Europe” can mean several different things — it can mean the richest northwest European countries like Sweden and the Netherlands, or it can include slightly poorer West European countries like Spain and France and the UK, or it can include East European countries that are still catching up after the fall of communism.
More fundamentally, though, the comparison is hard because life in the two countries is so different. If you like living in an urban apartment, strolling past picturesque old buildings to cute cafes, and taking a lot of vacation every year, then Europe is obviously for you. If you like living in a giant suburban house and having a bunch of friends drive over to barbecue and watch TV on your giant screen, then America is obviously the right pick. If you want to work 80 hour weeks building the future of AI, you should probably live in the U.S. If you want government health insurance and job security, I recommend Europe. There are also differences in politics and culture.
In general, my intuition is that all rich countries are about equally good places to live. One reason to believe this is that migration between rich countries is generally pretty small — it’s not that hard to move between Europe and the U.S., but not that many people do it. Here’s a map of the net migration difference between some European countries and the U.S., as a percent of each country’s population, for 2024:
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“it’s not that hard to move between Europe and the U.S” - I’m not sure about that. I think moving to US is way harder.
...and Americans here aren't faring too well, either. Constant visa and rights problems
YEs, we know. I'm not sure you need to write a post about this...?
SUPER well-known, jezus
If American culture could incorporate and normalize part-time work and using earned leave, it would be a huge improvement.
There are lots of econ jobs that I don't even apply for because I know the expectation is to work far more hours than I want. The strange thing, though, is that they also pay twice or more what I currently make and I would be willing to work half as many hours for half the offered pay.
Life ain't just about money. Free time's super valuable and you can't replace it!
Exactly
The videos from the UK crack me up. For as “bad” as we think prices are here nothing compares to Europe where gas prices would be $7-$8 a gallon