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Comment by anon7725

11 hours ago

I don’t think this captures the full story. The US has a bimodal standard of living reflected as a lower mean relative to other advanced nations.

It can be simultaneously true that immigrants to the U.S. from both advanced and developing nations both experience a higher standard of living than their countries of origin.

Immigrating to the U.S. with an advanced degree in an in-demand field: you likely will experience a higher standard of living.

Immigrating to the U.S. from a developing country without a particularly in-demand career: you likely will experience a higher standard of living.

> Immigrating to the U.S. with an advanced degree in an in-demand field: you likely will experience a higher standard of living.

And yet everyone here in SF has been mugged. Everyone has to deal with the poor air quality, crime, traffic, and a million other factors that impact daily life even when you are rich. Little paid time off, very short maternity leave.

I went back to Australia for the first time in 10 years, and even the guy stacking shelves at a liquor store had 8 weeks of paid leave, owned his own home, had a project car (a big V8), kids going to university, excellent healthcare even if he quits, etc etc.

Ordinary guy, better quality of life than many rich Americans.