do you thing Switzerland is good place for student to earn money in compared with US..?
does life in Switzerland better or US?
do you thing Switzerland is good place for student to earn money in compared with US..?
does life in Switzerland better or US?
and of course no offence to anyone..
yes it's not a cheap country. yes some people have a hard time getting by financially(it's a universal reality for most students around the world isn't it?)
there are much more expensive countries. Switzerland is according to some accounts in the ten most expensive countries in the world but it's all relative especially when taking into account local salaries.
ask different people and some will say most expensive is:
japan
one of the nordic countries(sweden etc)
england
singapore
etc etc etc
I think quality of life in Switzerland is better than in the USA but I have my own reasons.
Some people may be prefer the USA because they have shops open 24/7 cheaper rent etc
some like Switzerland because things are orderly and people live comfortably without worrying too much about healthcare(it's not cheap either)
Japan, South Korea, Russia, Taiwan, Norway, Hong Kong, Switzerland , Denmark, Argentina, China.
http://www.ubs.com/1/e/wealthmanagem..._earnings.html
Check page 11 for 'Working time required to buy . . .'.
According to the UBS survey it takes the typical Zürcher 9 hours to earn enough to buy an iPod, but it takes someone in Beijing 73 hours to do the same.
I believe the top ten was the overall price, not the affordability for the local workforce. You know, like the Big Mac index...
Our comparison of wages, working hours, taxes and
social security contributions are filled with interesting
information for internationally active companies that
often send highly skilled workers from headquarters to
foreign cities.
Perhaps these highly skilled workers sent by those internationally active companies would be seeking top-notch accomodation, conditions, etc that are in short supply, rather than settling for the local "average", thus driving prices further up in that price-bracket?
The Big Mac, bread, bag of rice and iPod indices are purchasing power parity indicators calculated against average wages in each city:
For years, our Big Mac index has been a trusty indicator
of how long an average wage-earner has to work
in order to afford that universal meal in each city. This
type of comparison is ideal for products that can be
purchased around the world in the same quality: products
such as an iPod.
So what's your point about international workers pushing up prices?
in my opinion the trick is how to earn more.
Limiting ourselves to richer countries (say the G20) is there any place where it's expensive with low net salary for a proper comparison?
Is there anything more to discuss?
I'd also go further and look at the money you have after taxes, insurance, food, accommodation, basic travel etc: do you have more left in Switzerland than in previous places to do what you want with it? We do. 'nuff said.