| ▲ | kdheiwns 3 hours ago | |||||||||||||
America is in a weird situation where people have a lot of money in terms of the number and it converts well to other currencies. But it feels worthless within American borders. An American can get a very sad and bad sandwich for about $20 in a mid sized American city. They can get a full meal with fresh ingredients in most of the rest of the world for $10 (no tip either). Some places even under $5. An American can rent a dump in a high crime city for $2000 a month. They can get a nice home for $500 a month in many other countries. An American can pay hundreds a month for health insurance that rejects their claims and covers absolutely nothing, resulting in a medical bill of tens of thousands of dollars. Medicines can cost thousands as well. They can pay out of pocket for treatment in another country and it'll cost hundreds, and medicine will cost a few bucks. | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | jackcosgrove 3 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
That's not weird at all it's the difference in most cases between products and services produced by local labor vs products and services produced by more abundant, cheaper labor elsewhere. I don't complain about $20 meals because I think inequality is bad enough. The only thing in your list that could be cheaper without underpaying local workers are pharmaceuticals. | ||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | xemdetia 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
The health insurance is the part that just is hard to relate to much of the world which is where the fear/sadness comes from. It is the undertone in any wealth discussion. So many people in the US see their family and friends get medically bankrupted for one reason or another and insurance being tied to employment makes everything awful. The fact that you simply can't save enough to get medical care is foundationally depressing. | ||||||||||||||
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