Choice of country ?
Please let me ask you the following :
if you had the possibility to move anywhere in Europe, which country would you choose ?
please take the following details into consideration : cost of living, medical care, climate, educational system, how easy it is to settle and get on with people.
Thanks a lot for answering, as we might have to make a choice in the very near future!
Urielle
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Well, I'm from France and I am living in Canada, but if I had to move again, I'd love to go to Italy.
I like its history, its culture, its way of life... the climate is wonderful and so is the food...

Moreover, I really like the language.
For a European citizen, it has become easy to move there...
But this is not (yet?) on my agenda.
Olivier

I lived in the UK and now in Spain ... From my experience I can say that the spanish way of life is a good choice!
This country is one of the cheapest (with Portugal and Italy I think) even if it is more expensive than it was 5 years ago ... medical care is not bad, education is good (ok, I do think that because my girlfriend is a teacher), it's quite easy to find a flat/house, and to meet people. Spanish people are open minded and it's not very hard to make friends

well that's my experience, I still have to visit most of the countries in your list (I don't know them) ... I'd like to go for holidays in Belgium some friends told me it's a very nice country!
I'd like to go to Rome it is said to be a fantastic city!
Just went to Rome in January: no way I would move there. Just not at all "la dolce vita" that people talk about. I don't "feel" the Italian lifestyle like some people do; it totally does not inspire me. Just like Paris actually: great to visit, not so great to live. And, it is NOT cheap.
It's very personal, anyway. If I didn't like warm weather so much, I would probably enjoy Iceland or Denmark, Sweden, etc. I love the Netherlands too. Amsterdam is one of my favorite places. But it's north, unfortunately.
That was my little input, for what it's worth.

This is mostly due to the rich culture, history, the lanugage, the culinary artistry, and the wine country. Having lived in North America for a long time, I would love a more laid back place. I have the feeling that the French know how to live well.
-- However, moving around the world shouldn't be just for the sake of moving. Grass is NEVER greener on the other side. Some people will be happy wherever they are, and some people will never be happy no matter where they are. Every place on earth has the pros and cons, but finding happiness with what you presently have is the key to the "good life". -- what do I know, eh? ...

Maybe Norway because fjords are very beautiful, and moreover Norway is the best place ever to live according to the UN yearly report on living conditions.
Actually, the first question is : will I choose an european country next time ??? It could be Australia ... we will see
Unfortunately (perhaps), the Brits like to live in particular areas where there are already fellow-countrymen at hand as most of them find it too hard to learn Spanish (the average age of 'los ingleses' is 57, so they tend to be retired and hoping to take things easy). In my province - AlmerÃa - there are said to be 25,000 Brits. In Málaga, there are probably 250,000!
Spanish figures just out claim 44 million people here, of which 8.5% (they reckon...) are extranjeros: that's a minimum of 4 million scattered about the country! Mainly Moroccans, followed by Equatorians.. and including large numbers (in order) of Rumanians, Columbians, Brits, Argentinians and Germans...
So Spain. There is the 'costa' which is most of the Mediterranean coast, where you can live a type of English-in-the-sun life... and the rest of the country, with its many attractions, and where you can learn/join in the culture and society of España.
Hey Julien - It's a great site. Enhorabuena. (1000 posts!?!)
I would have preferred a Scandinavian country, where there is snow in winter, and wonderful fiords in summer. But I am happy there I am...
with sea so close...Olivi€R wrote:For a European citizen, it has become easy to move there [in Italy]...
Humm... perhaps more easier than getting the Canadian nationality. But I do not agree with you Olivier. I am maybe unlucky... but it is hard in Italy to obtain the official papers proving that I work and have my residence there. And if you do not have one document you cannot go further with administrative stuff.
jujuly25 wrote:But I do not agree with you Olivier. I am maybe unlucky... but it is hard in Italy to obtain the official papers proving that I work and have my residence there. And if you do not have one document you cannot go further with administrative stuff.
Italy and some other european countries have huge reforms to do in that matter... After all, it should be as easy to move from France to Italy than to move from a region to another in the same country.
Things should be made at the EU level to help the Europeans to enjoy their freedom of move and work inside the whole Union... which is not currently true.
manu wrote:(to continue the practice of english, which, in my case, is very bad :p).
Come here and practice with us! No complex! 
Are you excited to go (back) to France or will you regret many things of your life in California?
Olivi€R wrote:manu wrote:(to continue the practice of english, which, in my case, is very bad :p).
Come here and practice with us! No complex!
No complex at all, Olivi€r, don't worry 
My vote on this list would be Spain. I move to Denmark in two weeks, and maybe it will win out--who knows. But it certainly cannot be worse than Dublin!
I moved to Ireland 3 weeks ago, and I really enjoy it.
I found a very good job, people are quite nice, prices are affordable in general.
I like my country

And I like Ukrain

But I would like to live in Asia

I really don't know the Eastern Europe: how is it to live overthere? it seems to be the Eldorado (economicly), but a wave of people is doing the way around.
expatstud wrote:I've been living in Dublin for the past 9 months and I must say I do not care for it at all. It's wildly expensive, the wages do match the cost of living, and it is generally dirty (I stayed so sick during the first six months that the physician advised me to wear a face mask and never eat out...) The people are nice enough, but the weather totally sucks.
I have been living in Dublin (Ireland) for five beautiful years. I definetly didn't have your experience but I agree with you: Dublin is dirty, smelly... Temple Bar
closed on the 25th dec. a must to smell.
We shouldn't forget that Dublin isn't the country! They are so many other towns: Galway, Waterford, Wexford... so nice to live in. Quiet, beautiful scenery and people.
coconath wrote:I have already been to Spain (Barcelona) , and i know that I could not live over ther. Like in London, people are quite unfriendly, it's too touristic and very busy. I don't even evok the cost of life.
I moved to Ireland 3 weeks ago, and I really enjoy it.
I found a very good job, people are quite nice, prices are affordable in general.
Finally, someone who posts some truth! I have exactly the same experience and for posting this got jumped on by some broad who called it racist but don't even live in Barcelona, and who compares local people's lives and situation in the city with those of expats!
I live in Barcelona but know this is not at all where I want to be, or will stay in. I have a friend who moved from Russia to Barcelona and loved it. The first few months. Now she plans to move. I think you can 'love' a place like this only if you come from something much worse and are struggling to get on, but never if you've experienced normal life or just what in the rest of Europe would be quite ordinary.
bcnexpat wrote:I think you can 'love' a place like this only if you come from something much worse and are struggling to get on, but never if you've experienced normal life or just what in the rest of Europe would be quite ordinary.
I've just joined this site and was hoping to find some advice about moving to Barcelona. I must admit I was quite surprised to find so much negativity about the city in this post and took the liberty of looking at a few of your other posts. You really don't like the place, do you? I'd jump at the chance to rent a flat in the part of the city you are in at the price you are paying. Let me know when you're leaving.
Oh, btw, I have plenty of experience of 'normal' life and I certainly don't live in 'something much worse.'
bcnexpat wrote:I have exactly the same experience and for posting this got jumped on by some broad who called it racist but don't even live in Barcelona, and who compares local people's lives and situation in the city with those of expats!
Maybe she should have said misogynist
Anyway, what's so wrong with comparing local people's lives with expats? I've lived in several places in my lifetime and everywhere I've lived I've wanted to know more about the local community. I certainly don't want to spend my life in some expat ghetto. Maybe your perception of Barca would change if you got out a bit more and mingled with some locals?
But, is it just me ? Only nobody has mentioned the NOISE in Spain.
I had the good fortune ten years ago to spend a free couple of months in Barcelona as a guest of Spanish friends in Australia. I lived both in the centre of Barcelona - Eixample - five minutes walk to the Ramblas, and up the coast a bit at Premia de Mar at their beach house.
It truly is a fascinating and often beautiful city, in an equally beautiful part of Spain, Catalonia.
(I did find that I couldn't use my limited Spanish as most people I met were strongly Catalonian-minded and defiantly spoke only Catalan. So I spoke a lot of French which is related).
But the noise was my biggest disappointment. 24 hour car horns, barking dogs, 3am garbage collections, neighbours simply living, loving, arguing, but all at a decibel level that I found disturbing as a Brit. I'd been living for a long time in Australia before that trip and had not been prepared for that cultural shock of noise, as Aussies, like British folk in the U.K. are generally very considerate and have strict noise pollution regulations and a general cultural sensitivity for others - although, of course, there are sometimes, unluckily for those poor souls who live close by, those in a society who are totally oblivious or simply completely selfish and insensitive.
The noise actually started at the departure lounge in Rome airport and didn't cease until I arrived back in Rome airport. It was incessant. And it troubled me greatly as I need a quieter environment.
I've lived in S.E.Asia for a very long time and noise is a big problem in many countries there. The worst place in my experience has been Thailand where local markets use huge loudspeakers that only have one volume setting - Maximum! And it's a culture where no-one ever complains, and they have no concept of noise pollution.
So, can anybody please respond and tell me that I was just unlucky in that particular part of Spain, or is it nation-wide and just simply part of the Meditteranean culture ?
I know... too expensive.
Unlike you young folk I haven't travelled much.
I went to Dublin for a long weekend. My son said the Irish were friendly people but those who say it is dirty are right, and too wet and too expensive. A shame.
I was in Watford UK three years ago, at my Dad's home. The health service was lousy, the social services better than here in France. I like the people of course but the culture has changed so much since I was young. I don't want to go back. It's money, money, money.
New Labour stinks. I'm a dinosaur.
Goodness knows what France is going to turn into now. We've had elections, if you didn't know...
I'd never ever live in Portugal again, I hope I do have the choice in the future, we never know ;-)
The noise is a tradeoff for the sunny atmosphere and life lived outside, which I would rather have than Brussels' totally deserted residential streets. It does help to find a quieter street, get double-glazed windows, and get accustomed to the noise. I wish they could require scooters and motorcycles to be quieter (and emit less pollution)!
I fell in love with this city while I was falling in love with my husband, and I feel an affinity for Spanish (and now Catalan) culture that started when I was in high school, so I guess that's all part of it. I'm sure everybody will have a different spot in the world that feels more like home than others.
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