Saw this in Ritholtz’s email. It’s interesting. As I read it, you would be well served to land in one of the countries show that have lowest housing costs such as: Italy, Japan & Croatia - and the cost of living in these countries, in general, should be manageable as the residents also have low disposable incomes (your money will go further). I might add, if I were leaving I would consider the Caribbean countries/islands but I have no idea how they would fall on this chart.
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https://www.expatincroatia.com/american-citizens/
Lets all move to Croatia! I'm down.
On another note: I like reading Ritholtz ... In particular I follow Nick Maggiulli ... subcscribe to his newsletter or weekly email. You won't be disappointed.
Not saying that that's a bad system, at all. I really do believe that we have an obligation to help those less fortunate financially. Life simply isn't fair in determining who gets what. I have no problem with our taxes, and try to pay our fair share for the common good.
But that doesn't mean that anything is "free", at all.
Portugal has a program where you can move there and live there for 10 years and just pay taxes on your foreign earnings to your country of citizenship. I think they are charging a 10% tax on you pension. I am not sure what a US citizen has to do to get residency there. It is much easier for EU residents as they can just move there.
"OJ you are right. Nothing is free."
Since OJ's comment was regarding healthcare, it is worth noting that Heinlein (TANSTAAFL) aside, a small number of healthcare services are literally free.
Though it's a myth that preventive care generally pays for itself, which would make it free of net costs, it is true that a few preventive care services do pay for themselves. Possibly when all is said and done, the Covid-19 vaccines will fall into that category. As do some other immunizations. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22052182/