Adrian_Thompson wrote:
Tim, I'm really glad you chimed in as you're the most frequent UK based poster here. I didn't know your story though. BoxheadTim wrote: Housing is rather expensive (one of the reasons that I moved out of London, I was on a good salary and couldn't afford to buy a decent place). Houses are also very small by European (let alone US) standards. Now that the exchange rate has tanked, the rest of Europe has become quite expensive to travel to, too.
Yup, I wish I hadn't sold my apartment in Worthing about 8-9 years ago, I'd never be able to afford anything now. Housing varies massively by region in both countries, but as a swag for a similar size OR socioeconomic area I'd say it's 3-4 times as expensive to buy in the UK as the US
Prices are falling again, though. Or have fallen and are on the rebound, depending on who you ask. The 3-4 times factor is certainly true if you compare square footage, if you go by category (ie, look at what a family of four buys in the US or the UK) it's probably about 2x.
Adrian_Thompson wrote:
BoxheadTim wrote:
VAT is 17.5% btw, with a few discounted items at 7% IIRC.
OK, that's changed. Didn't some luxury good go up to 19% about 4-5 years ago? I've been gone nearly 16 years now.
Doesn't ring a bell, but pretty much the only luxury goods that I buy seem to be Porsche spares...
They're upping the taxes on alcoholic drinks seemingly every five minutes, might be that they bumped the tax on champagne or somesuch. Alcohol is getting stupidly expensive here (for our own good, obviously) but strangely enough that doesn't stop people from falling out the pub completely hammered.
Adrian_Thompson wrote:
BoxheadTim wrote:
caught the motorsport bug here
Easy to do :) There are just so many more races/sprints/hillclimbs etc and Motorsport is just part of the culture. F1 is recognized as life and death over there :)
But motorsport another thing that's getting more and more restricted, the NIMBYs moving into cheap houses next to a race track and then complaining about the noise. My local track (Lydden Hill) is only allowed to hold a certain number of events per year for that reason, others like Bedford have extremely restrictive noise rules.
Open road racing is pretty much dead in England/Wales/Scotland (Northern Ireland still has them, as has the Isle of Man), the French have no problem closing half a town for road racing (check out Pau) but try that here...
Adrian_Thompson wrote:
BoxheadTim wrote:
I'm still keeping a foothold here for the time being, but I'll see how I fare in the US - some of the politics there scare me somewhat, but the bible throwers have been gaining ground over here as well, so it's not that unusual to me.
I have no problem with religion and do on occasions attend church, but I don't believe is a gray haired old man sitting on a throne in the sky creating/destroying and passing out judgment. I do have a problem with religious extremism. I never saw that at all when I was still in the UK, although I understand it's changing now. Over here it's regional. It only get's scary when the extremists start dictating policy and education.
I don't have a problem with religion either, even though I've become an atheist over time. My mum still plays the organ in church and has worked for the protestant church in Switzerland for years...
It's the extremists as you say, the ones that want to save you (or is it your wallet?) if you want to or not. And I'm seeing a surge of that here, most definitely. I also notice that it's happening in Germany, but on a smaller scale.
Adrian_Thompson wrote:
BoxheadTim wrote:
Of course in classic immigrant "steal our women and our jobs" I've got the woman, now I need a job .
I've got both :)
I hope I've got the job soon, too. Out there somewhere is a Corvette or an NSX with my name on it, I just have to figure out how to pay for it .
Adrian_Thompson wrote:
Now, taking my own thread off topic, your personal career situation apart, what do you think of the UK Vs Germany as a place to live and work these days?
I really liked what I saw in Cologne when I was there for work, and loved the Eiffel mountain area when I went to the Ring.
OK, keep in mind that my view of Germany is somewhat coloured by my experience. I've run several businesses, one in Germany, several here - the one in Germany triggered the aforementioned glass ceiling because being an entrepreneur is already considered a little iffy and you're only respected if you succeed. Fail and you're, well, slightly restricted in your further career choice. The major stumbling block for me has always been that the definition of 'career' in Germany is go to University or technical college and get a good job, stay there until they can't fire you (usually 5-10 years).
Of course the joke is that I ended up working for German companies in the UK that wouldn't touch me with a bargepole back in Germany .
That aside, I think that I'd have problems going back to Germany and living there. People in the UK do have a certain flexibility to deal with life's lemons whereas in Germany, it's more by the rulebook. That's really getting on my nerves, especially if you're in a situation that almost mimics "computer says no, only because rulebook says no. However, the joke that the most used German word is "Verboten" can now be applied to the UK at least in equal measure.
OTOH, if you hire a tradesperson in Germany, the work they do tends to be of slightly, shall we say, superior quality to what you get in the UK (says the guy who's just had to retile part of his bathroom and the kitchen to undo some of the damage the previous owner, who is in the building trade, has done). And I find it a lot easier to deal with people from Germany when it comes to selling cars as I tend to describe mine honestly, which is viewed as 'too negative' here in the UK...
There are plenty of beautiful areas in Germany, you've got everything from the seaside to proper mountains; I grew up on the Swiss border (Lake Constance, if that means anything to you) and it's really nice down there but it's not a place that I'd chose to go back to. I think I've seen too much of the rest of the world to go back - well, you can never go back anyway, but "go back there". Not to mention that going back wouldn't be easy with Ann in tow as she doesn't speak German, which makes getting a residency permit (let alone a work permit) hard to get.
All that said, the one thing I always liked about Germany - actually, about most of continental Europe - is the different balance between work and life, and the bigger emphasis on quality of life. Work a little less, but spend a bit more time enjoying yourself. Oh, and the feeling of space. The UK is very crowded, at least down here in the Southeast.
Germany seems to keep borrowing ideas from the UK though (like privatising the railways, with similar 'wonderful' results) and I'm not convinced that they're good ones. The social security system has been eroded somewhat, same goes for health care (pay more for less coverage, sounds familiar?) so it's not the "employee's paradise" it used to be.
Would I move to the UK again? Maybe. But plan B if the emigration to the US failed was either to go try find work in France (good food, much more motorbike friendly than UK or Germany, plenty of beautiful women to ogle, wife loves it there) or go out to the Far East. Maybe it's because I haven't found the place I want to be buried at yet.