My hypothesis is that Indians go the America for one of 3 reasons: 1. To save money 2. To escape family 3. To escape society If you don't have one of these 3 problems, India is likely the better choice in the long term. But people who want to stay a short term in the US would end up making a much bigger corpus than they can ever in India. The PPP argument applies to only those planning to live in the US.
@@AndWeWillNeverBeAloneAgain they could, but the frequency of visit is lower when one is abroad vs within India. So, not total BS. People tell me they've left India to escape family all the time - especially women who don't want to stay with in laws.
perfect statement..you are only one who got it... not her. she is just young and she shd not make such videos without any experience..people living short term or even for 10 yrs plu sor minus will be most benefitted as you said..that is what i alread y realized and planning move back now.. it is not bcs india is good alternative
I have the same thoughts Young people are to much uncomfortable these days, they are living in fast paced emotional, insecure roller coaster... it's not their problem It's the change that happening in our social febric all around the world
Ok, I'm not Indian, I'm from south America but I really like this channel and despite that supposedly we don't have much in common I can say that I learn a lot with you guys, thanks a lot.
Sometimes Protecting your capital is much more important than making money. Basically because if you lose your capital, making money is much harder no matter the country you find yourself. ''Missing the train'' vs. ''losing your money''. There are a lot of trains, but if your money is gone, it's over.
Nobody knows anything, you need to create your own process, manage risk and stick to the plan, through thick or thin ,While also continuously learning from mistakes and improving.
Many overlook that banks are return-driven businesses. I don't trust keeping a large sum in a bank. Instead, I invest with guidance, enjoy the benefits, and save for retirement.
After the '08 financial crisis, I've learned not to trust corporations. Since 2020, I've been investing with a financial advisor and have had no major losses, so I'm not going back to relying solely on banks.
@@LucasBenjamin-hv7sk Market behavior can be complex and unpredictable. Mind if I ask you to recommend this particular coach to whom you have used their services?
@@Jesssco Atlest this chai person is doing something. Your favourite canditate has swapped his brain for fresh cow dung. THe moment he cretes a machine where by inserting potato on one side and gold come out the other side he will win. Till then shut the fuck up and continue the research for they machine.
I'm an Indian who is now living in USA. While growing up in India in a developing nation I used to think that to have a good life, all I have to do is move to a developed country. But after moving to America, a developed nation, I realized that to have a good life in a developed country, you have to work harder than a developing country, there are absolutely no breaks, labour is not cheap so you have to work hard a lot throughout the day. Now I understand why developed nation is developed. If you move from a developing nation to a developed nation and don't start working harder physically and mentally then you will remain poor in a developed country.
The working conditions in India are just as bad in usa. even worse actually. The problem is that for the amount of work u do u do not get the money u deserve in India. But u do get the money in usa. Also the huge population is the biggest burden in India. There is competition in every field. And a lot of times deserving skilled people don't get what they deserve here. Even the exams which is the best way for an Indian to get a job are rigged. So yeah there are definitely advantages of moving to a developed country. You have to work harder anywhere in the world. It's about what u want in life. Actually, 100k dollars is a very respectable salary. You are in the top 6 percent of Americans btw.
I would be happy living like a king in developing country and help my country grow rather than working like slaves in a so called rich country which is not my own. So much of materliasm in west, we will definitely get broke. We have never grown up this way.
I totally agree with you. I lived in USA for about 1.5 years. Travelled extensively. I was in disbelief because while growing up, we used to watch all good things about the USA in movies. But the reality is far different. In the end me and my wife decided that it's not worth to waste our lives in USA and we moved back to India. BTW, before coming back, we did a roadtrip around the USA. We were on road for 37 days and covered east coast to west cost via south and then went back from west coast to east coast via north. I'm planning to upload the videos of my travel journey soon!
@@ntl9974 it should be, considering you could be robbed blind and nobody will help you. I thought police in India were apathetic (which they are), but this is something else.
@@ntl9974 I probably won’t be scared, but for a woman I think it would be distressing especially after witnessing burglary happening left and right. What does it have anything to do with “rape accusations in India”, Like it doesn’t happen anywhere else?
American Indian, living in the U.S. for 24 years now. Here's my perspective - a LOT of things have changed since the U.S. boom period of ex-President Bill Clinton. That era was the absolute best time to move to the U.S. Homelessness was always a part of the U.S., but if you knew how to read a JAVA book, you had a job in the mid to late 90s. I personally know Veterinarian docs who shifted to IT during those days and made a killing. Today's U.S. is entirely different - highly competitive, technology changing every week (if not sooner) and a huge pool of talent available. Combine that with a rising inflation, geo-political dynamics, and you get the U.S. of today. It still is (by many standards) one of the best countries to live in, but it's definitely not the U.S. of the golden era. This is fact.
You said it and it will be better country to live in than India in future too. It will always be relative, except US should pay India to provide well educated person for which they did not spend any money on.
@@HershGoel-f2fWait by 2025! US Bankruptcy is real shit. Economy will collapse. Just wait and watch. You know nothing bro. Also, US Independence charter calls you Indians as Savage Indian beasts. So beware, racism will increase. Think before you speak lad.
I totally agree. My parents immigrated to the US from India in the 90s. Nowadays, everything is super expensive, and salaries haven't yet caught up with the increased cost of living. Those fresh out of university who are just starting their career have to live paycheck to paycheck if they can't stay with their parents until they move higher up the corporate hierarchy. They spend almost everything they earn just to live. If you can't afford a car like many people, public transportation here is awful, so it's better to have a bicycle, because that actually is faster! NYC has better public transportation, but everything else there is ridiculously expensive, so it's better to live somewhere else.
Great video! As an engineer in Silicon Valley, I agree with the pros and cons discussed. However, the work hours and the work culture can be more demanding than often depicted and is not as good as many people assume it to be.
@@iamuzumakianduchiha776 Instead of doing masters, better invest that huge sum of money on Indian stock market, you'll get better income than working in US
Most Indian who are settled in US don't stay in these super big cities...smaller cities such as Charlotte, Atlanta, Dallas are definitely not like this ....
americans also living in villages in india not in major cities ,get your brains clear first. they want our village life they construct companies here in village eradicating indians farming and agriculture.
Lived in the US for over 25 years and moved back to India a couple of years ago. You're absolutely spot on regarding past American living. Things have been changing considerably and will continue to change in the future as well. Many countries are using America as a template for success and slowly getting smarter and moving towards reducing the gap. India has to improve in many areas which we all already know. Most importantly, the mindset has to change to put country/sate/city/colony/street first. Every action, no matter how small, in the right direction will bring about change for all to see a better India! I would LOVE to see that India in my lifetime!
Hey what about if someone saves money in us and send it to India to their parents and purchased a building,mall,hospital after that enjoy the rest of life in India?
Dude she only talked about two of the worst cities to live in. I was in Utah for 2 years and it didn’t have most of these problems. So take an informed decision than listening to just one sided nonsense
@@amnagrawalhey is utah livable..? Like I'll be immigrating to US so should I choose Utah over Texas..? Like is it worth ? How are the prices and is real estate good ..?
Another point to consider. If you go as a student, you go on a F visa. You get max 2 years of OPT (optional practical training) period after you graduate during which time you can work and apply for H1B which is obtained through a lottery. So you get two to three chances to be in the lottery, and if you are lucky, you get your H1B. H1B must be renewed every three years, and you have to come to your home country every time to get the new visa stamp. During these 6 years, your employer must apply for a green card for you, otherwise you'd have to return after the 6 years of H1B are exhausted. The green card application process (just the submission) takes around one year, minimum. Once the application has been submitted, you can get your H1B renewed as long as your GC application is in the queue. But remember on H1B, you can not pursue your own startup (without some extraordinary situations involving expensive lawyers and lots of money), not can you one day decide that you want to try being something other than whatever role your H1B was granted for (say a software engineer). And if you lose your job, you have 60 days to get a new job and a new H1B (which takes from 3 to four weeks) otherwise you have to return home. Finally, the GC queue at this time is really long. One report from last year says 134 years for an Indian applicant. Consider these factors before you make the jump. There are going to be challenges everywhere, but I hope all young people are well informed before they make such life changing decisions. Best of luck for whatever you decide.
I’ve just found myself coming to the thing that most spiritual text talk about: “Find peace within yourself first”. There’s any options and many paths. It can be confusing. Just evaluate your situation, ask an AI assistant if required and come to your own conclusions. People will keep being engaged and try to engage you in a shouting contest. If there’s anything I’d hope you use to discern - it’s what you can perceive as negative and what is positive for you. Just get the facts and the rest are all just opinions. Putting down one country in favour of another is not going to serve anyone any good.
Amazing content! I have been following your videos for sometime now, consistently kicking down Wall Street doors for two years now, I have over $320k in stocks. Currently, my portfolio is down by 15%. Wondering if they're any short term opportunities I can invest in.
I agree that there are strategies that could be put in place for solid gains regardless of economy or market condition, but such executions are usually carried out by investment experts or advisors with experience
Reason I decided to work closely with an brokerage-adviser ever since the market got really tensed and the pressure became so much(I should be retiring in 17months) so I've had an brokerage-adviser guide me through the chaos, its been 9months and counting and I've made approx. 650K net from all of my holdings.
How can I participate in this? I sincerely aspire to establish a secure financlal future and am eager to participate. Who is the driving force behind your success?
Elisse Laparche Ewing is the licensed fiduciary I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.
As someone living in America, I can validate everything she's saying. American Dream is a fluff. No one is talking about the realities of staying here. This is a good video.
America is not just New York or California, there is a huge contrast of how people view it from outside to what actually the whole of America looks like. The more woke places, which are the big cities in America are having the worst time.
i am glad i realised this in my early teens, 2 decades ago, and i never developed any other country dream in the first place. all the negative facts she mentioned, were true and to the ground; and must be considered instead of just getting happy with the movies. yes they all have guns, they have stupid laws, there are poor/homeless people, educated but homeless people, and thousand other things which would make you vomit. Our country is still a lot better in some ways, although we need constant improvement in so many levels anyway.
This is such a bullshit comparison. I have lived in the US as a student. And you just cannot compare living in India with US. The cultures are different, the life is different. As she said at the start of her video, how do you put a price tag on clean air. You can get the same advantages moving to a lower PPP economy than India. But did it cross your mind to compare your life with it and move to that country? No, because the intangible comparisons are hard to make. Land in the US and the first breath you take, you can feel the difference. It's like living in Darjeeling with the view of Delhi. Our food is adulterated, water is contaminated, hygiene is non existent, roads are pot holled and traffic is congesting. You cannot do a PPP comparison of life here with a developed country.
@@realracing3specter295 Homicide rate is highly dependent on where you live. You have more chances of dying from lightening strike than a mass shooting. Compare it with the cities in UP and you'll see that we are no safer. They have stupid laws? Really? You think India has more freedom than the US? 100s of reporters in jail for tweeting against Modiji will disagree with you. Homelessness in US vs India? You've got to be blind or highly privileged to not see how bad homelessness is here. In the US, the only reason you are homeless is if you are on drugs and deny taking govt. housing. Any person who is homeless and wants to have a roof over is head is provided by the state. Homeless people in the US are mostly drug addicts. Come on a tour with me in Delhi and I'll show you what actual poverty looks like. USA isn't perfect but unless you are making shit loads of money in India, life here is way tougher than in the US. Now let me take your leave and switch on the air purifier, because the very freaking air we breathe needs to be cleaned up.
@@mathurp6889 i agree with most of your points. But even american food is terrible. That's why its the most obese countries in the world. it's a country where coke is cheaper than a bottle of water. Big food corporations are ruining people's health for their profits. and being a capitalist economy no one can say anything against big companies.
You are doing a great job helping the youth take informed decisions.. I stopped my niece going to Canada last year and she is so thankful knowing what she knows now! Well done Aevy TV!
I remember 10 years back when I visited Texas, we didn't know about the tipping culture. The Cab costed us $58. $50 was readily available and then I started giving the driver $1 at a time till I have given him 8 notes and then I said done. The absolute look of disappointment he gave on my very first day in US I will not forget. Later after knowing the tipping culture I realised where I goofed up 😂
This is crazy. I just had a conversation a few hours ago with an american, a brit and a new zealender of the same job as me and we got to salaries and initially was feeling why i was getting paid so less but the conversation soon went into comparative salaries and expenses and realised I'm actually doing better than them. And the american was talking about all these problems of homelessness and the law of not getting punished for theft of less than 1000 usd. So weird
@@sarveshlobana8573 You have no idea the horror of homelessness in USA. The homeless in India don't threaten you, they are just poor miserable on the street.
@@sarveshlobana8573 The homeless population here is literally homeless. As in they don't have a house, so they live in railway stations etc with their entire families. They aren't violent or dangerous. You'll hardly ever hear of a street-dweller attacking someone. They're just families who can't afford housing. As opposed to people with drug issues and whatnot.
This is an incredibly high quality video. Kudos AevyTV. I was in America for my masters and did not get picked up in H1b. I was there from 2009-2014. I have lived in SF, North Carolina, Connecticut, Orlando and America was a very different place at that time. It really was just like in the movies. The drug and homeless crisis was not that bad and cost of living, even though high, was not this bad. It is only in the last few years that these issues have exponentially exploded. Another thing that is not discussed about studying and working in America is loneliness/depression. Most of my friends have gone through it due to varios reasons like away from family, breakups, feeling like an outsider, etc. It gets much worse once you get out of the study phase and get a job. In college, you still have frieds and good roommates. Once you get a job, you are usually working most of the time and time you suddenly have a large income you really dont know what to do with(roommates at this phase are also working and dont have time to socialize). Many Indians just go bonkers with their spending. I have personally suggested and helped 2 of my close friends to come back to India and they are doing really well here. Its not all doom and gloom yet though you have a good support system and are able to mingle with Americans well, you will do juat fine there.
If you can earn 30L per annum in India, don't be stupid, just stay in India, You can go on a holiday if you love to experience foreign cultures. Only people that can live a compromised life and have plans to save money and return to India might think about leaving India, or people that want to expand their business. Other than that, please don't leave India and ruin your life.
Problem is when you earn 30L per anum, you have to pay 6L income tax. If you don’t own a house and you like to get one in a big city (probably where you work like Bengaluru) the cost would be 1.5CR minimum for a 2bhk apartment. And end up Paying hefty premium for cars, bikes and phones etc… Only food is affordable in big cities in india.
@@cybersrikanth You'll be rolling when you get to know, you have to pay similar taxes in developed countries too and cost of living is way higher and forget about owning your own house. And if you're smart you can evade taxes in India quite easily using all the loopholes and our IT department is not as harsh as in other countries. My comment is only for high earning individuals, if you are earning less you can make the compromise and leave India to earn money but if you're already earning well, India is the best place to live. India is definitely not a great place for middle and upper middle class
A few years back, I got mugged in Houston, and when the cops arrived 20 minutes later, they said it’s pretty normal here. I was shocked to hear from American cops that it’s not like Manhattan or Miami, where you safely roam in the the dark. Although their gentle and supportive tone helped calm my nerves, it made me realize that the idyllic America portrayed in movies is only the reality in a few places. In contrast, during my IIFA trip to NJ we roamed freely on the streets of NYC and spent good time in Miami Key West, and those experiences were unmatched and memorable
Dude, you are talking as if America is heaven like country. Show me one country where you dont get afraid of getting mugged, or robbed, or get shot or rape or murder. Except Antarctica and greenland I dont think there is 100% safe place. Every country has ghetto areas. Also you are talking about Houston which is in Texas and Texas is known for those kind of sh*t. So whatever you said id bullsh*t. And yes Cops were 100% right, its very normal in texas and few other states. Just like how India is unsafe in many many places.
I live in Houston suburbs lol. I notice there is police in every at&t and verizon store in houston area and I often wondered why. Anyways im so glad I never got mugged.
@@ajayrm4673 Bhai, one can get robbed in India too and the cops here are useless. Why do we Indians feel the need to paint the US as some sort of apocalyptic lawless country? Is it to cope with the fact that we are not living there?
@@lookeshdas455 Yup, but that only works if you plan to return to India at some point for good. If you continue to stay there, a savings of 24K a year is peanuts and basically the road to future homelessness. And the longer you stay there and get acclimatized to an American lifestyle and looking down upon Indians in India, the harder it will be for you to return knowing that the rest of your life will never live up to what you experienced in the US.
Dollar will go long way till it survives as global reserve currency. It is bound to crash by this decades or next. Trump, Elon musk, Ray dalio, have started to raise the alarm bells on the US debt status and De-dollarization. These are prominent figures and not your average tom dick and Harry.
You're doing a great job Achina! I know Varun from so long, I got to know today that you both are together. Sending positive vibes for you in bonkers!!
If Indian didn't understand what American life is after watching this video than.... god save them. I am American Indian living in America from last 21 years. There is no more such thing like American dream. Wake up people.
i live in america,, these things dont bother us.. i live new jersey..the dream stil lexist.. if u say no then india is getting even worse. may be you shd look for other countries. .but the way people are syaing india is better is total dream and they are not being practical.. at all
I also lived in america... for almost 45 years.... I left 5 years ago.... i think it was the best decision that I ever made... There's a saying.... "You have to be asleep to believe in the American Dream..." The American Dream as we used to know it is over....
@@mruncletheredge not true at al..dont mislead the young generation l.. American dream still true ..I am planning to go back to India next yr..but I still know for young starters..america is still the best option...no doubt ...
lmao why do people think people move to the US to 'chase the American Dream'. A better work life balance is more than an enough reason to move. Cleaner air and streets are a big bonus too
@@amudhanbakthavathsalu5308 The American dream is iver. Wake up. I as an Indian have emigrated from USA to Portugal where I can get EU rights security, good Europeans local culture and not be k!lled by an immigrant or a dr#g dealer
It's my first time watching this channel and I am genuinely impressed at the quality of this. Also all the points were really balanced not prejudicing to any side. You earned my sub. Keep up the good work.
In my own experience the less you earn in India, it is more beneficial for you when you move to US. I am sure someone who previously earning 5 LPA salary in India and went to US will put a comment saying PPP does not matter and life in the US is so good. Some will even put long list of points about why everyone should try to go to US and why anyone who is not going is actually a big looser. I have been to that situation. At the beginning of my career I lived and worked in US for some years. That time it felt like winning a jackpot. However, now as I am earning well in India, I do see both pros and cons. Now India works better for me and I turned down offer for internal transfer to US for many times in recent past.
India is the sweet spot to live,not in a developed area,cuz people don't give a fck, moderately developed areas are very comfortable psychologically and physically near to the nature
Let me tell you as a foreigner being Indian who has for the most part lived outside of India multiple countries multiple places . That when she says India has a long way to go.- I realised how long that is in numbers it's 30 years + in terms of development . That's my India will always has , will. And stay as developing nation . Unless our own youth catalyses the process and narrowing that developmental gap. I'm in that power and I'm a person whose striving to take part and effort to narrow this gap in field of Biotechnology. Development Me doing the alone cannot bring a difference we need all youths from all departments to stand for their cause and work to bring actions and implementation to see the results. We so desire. I hope like minded people can reflect my POV . Kudos to Avey Tv bringing such topics in to light. Best regards to all. Take care
I am waiting for the video of exact concept till now since 2years….was searching for the same in youtube. I appreciate the effort and work of the crewmates in making video possible. Thank you!
2 ads in a single video! odoo and video editing masterclass! wow! youtube is becoming the new television! i have premium, yet cant skip ads promoted by creators!
RUclips is a free platform, but videos like this cost a lot to produce, so I don't mind creators taking up sponsors or promoting their own product. If you don't like it, just skip forward
Look I pay for YT premium, to not see ads, yet the creators advertise in addition to RUclips ads which is just rubbish... Imagine not paying for premium and watching 4 unskipable ads. Sheer nonsense!
Cost of healthcare in the USA: - Ambulance ride: $500 - Doctor's visit: $250-500 - Hospital stay: $5000 per night - ICU stay: $10,000 per night - Pregnancy (ordinary): $10,000 - Pregnancy (C-section): $20,000 I believe, PPP captures only the cost of food, not rent, healthcare, or insurance. Nice video!
In any decent city in india, rickshaw drivers are also earning 40-50k . Their wives earning 25k doing cooking and cleaning jobs. Their children being able to compleete a degree and get an internship. Hardworking Indians are going ok.
@@manasi92in rural India, small town in odisha I give my house help 1k per month only for sweeping and cleaning utensils.. that's almost 30 min per day of work.. are you serious in Mumbai it's 1k..
I was in Los Angeles my first ever trip to the states and only for a week; and while it was different, fascinating and beautiful I realized how little I desired to move there, because something also felt very cold and isolating about the city… you captured all the observations I too had, and came back to India feeling ever more committed to working and building my country! Thank you for putting this out there 🙏🏼
@@varunishere nah... its not just that, even if you have family and frnds there it just doesnt hit especially if you grew up in gali moholle of india lol
Obviously, you missed people spitting paan, the dirt, chaotic traffic, slums, filth, racism, caste system, pooping on streets, illiterate people , flaunting of rules , slums , corruption. A fly of gutter will only thrive Ina gutter. Thank you for making it easier for us to migrate . Wish all you Pajeets thought similarly
A very informative video, thoroughly research and its good to see someone who have been there discussion the pros and cons instead of just throwing numbers.
Some of it was thoroughly researched, and some of it was just cobbled together with a lot of misinformation sprinkled here and there. There goes your credibility LOL
I'm from NJ and I went to SF many years ago with my friend. I had the same experience as the Starbucks incident...My friend and I were waiting to be picked up on a Sunday morning at a bus stop by a tour company since we were going to Napa Valley for a wine tour. It was 8am and there were homeless people all around and it seemed like we were in a zombie movie. I would say to my knowledge years ago there was a large mental asylum in Arizona that shut down and gave patients a one-way ticket to SF, Portland Oregon, and I forget the third city, but it's no surprise those cities now have major drug and homeless problems. While I do agree with this video to an extent, as an American with Indian parents, I do think she is generalizing a bit....It's really difficult to generalize things with America because like India, each state is very different, not to mention our laws are highly decentralized, so laws that exist in California don't often exist in NJ or NY. Also, I know she is giving amounts of housing and so forth in INR, but it's not a completely fair comparison because you have to consider the rent to how much you are earning in USD. While the US has a lot of problems, I can say that my parents probably do have a better quality of life in the US than in India. It's true we don't have regular house help (though my mom does pay my neighbor to make a few meals and so forth) and my parents had to work very hard, my father who has lived in the US for the past 40 years, still retains his Indian citizenship for sentimental reasons, and went to an IIT school and left a good job in india to come to the US, acknowledges that he wouldn't have been able to save as much money or help his family back in India (building a house for my grandparents, etc.). even if he worked his whole life in India (with white money alone)...just giving some perspective, but maybe a lot of things have changed since then.
Such an amazing video. I just loved listening you. It was great explanation, personally liked your analysis and you were aptly able to put things in place. Great buddy. Kepe going. You earned a subscriber her.
"You can't put a price on clean air", says the person eating the most unhealthy food in the world. Even the raw veggies you get from Whole Foods is unhealthy and inorganic. My friends have developed various allergies and gained weight disproportionately after eating in the US (even home cooked). Food and healthcare are the reason I moved back to India permanently after 6 years in the US.
@@tarun4629 looks like someone hasn't done their calculations. Without H1B, it is impossible to stay 6 years in the US. My green card application was filed and I decided to forfeit it
@@tarun4629 nope , trust me EU is far better in terms of lifestyle than US , US is basically developed version of india with lots of cons , only thing it does well is paying software engineers well that too at a huge cost of living. you should live in a proper EU country like Denmark , Germany or Netherlands then you will understand the hell and heaven difference, my sister was literally walking at 2am at night alone in Germany still not afraid whereas u try that shit in US best of luck . US is only good for earning money to send to money not for living permanently
Beautiful Video! I have lived in new York city before and currently live in Michigan, and $100K here goes very far here compared to New York. Just a basic comparison (1 Gallon of milk costs $8 in New york, where as you can get the same can for almost $4 in other states. Furthermore, to the analysis made in the video, is how expensive your living is. People in the US are so used to buying expensive things (clothes/electronics) regardless of their income. I believe it is mostly to show off or the government and corporate monopolies has been running an agenda of expensive is best, buying cheaper products like non-organic stuff would cause cancer, etc.
Well, your comparison covers only SF & NY. Which are non representative of entire US. There are cities in the US where you get apartments for 900 bucks. 100k in NYC is s-hit, but in Baltimore would be a really decent salary
@@kbshrivastav8539lol I stay in Naperville and I work in AI.. who says one has to stay in big cities ? Ppl live in suburbs all the time..and if someone were to stay in nyc salary is not 100k.. a software engineer in nyc makes 200k or more .. in any city of usa a software engineer will make more than India
Sure but they get paid way less than American. The Company I work for has offices around the world. The Europeans get less salary than say an American, Canadian and an Australian.
Not to mention there is way more racism in Europe than in the US. The US isn't perfect...far from it...but at least they recognize their problems. In Europe, especially countries like France, they refuse to talk about race and racism, but it's a very big problem, especially for Indians.
Eupore is becoming like pakisthan with allowing of illegal immigrants that live freely with your tax payer money and loot , kill and ra pe people in name of religion.
As an Indian who has shifted to the US 2 years back, I totally agree with all the points. It’s a very subjective debate to compare both the economies based on personal lifestyle preferences. End of the day the cost of being away from your family cannot be matched but that can vary from person to person.
You had me at "why I wanna stay here" ❤ I was born in canada and came to India when I was 19 for emergency with my parents. And ever since I have never went back! Love indian lifestyle, india traveling, landscape, people. Everything ❤
In India, the abundance of labor stems from a large population, contributing to its affordability. A hallmark of developed nations is the dignity of labor, ensuring fair treatment and the ability to save for the future without relying on connections. Clean roads, spacious environments, and mutual respect are cultivated over decades. Adherence to environmental regulations and maintaining litter-free spaces are national endeavors that improve overall quality of life. Whether dropping kids at school, enjoying a stroll in a large park, or embarking on road trips in an RV, these experiences are invaluable to those who cherish them. The structured life of order comes with its costs, where living in suburbs often means avoiding high expenses and enjoying a better cost of living. Moreover, quick police response and the bravery of firefighters during emergencies are truly commendable. Having lived here for over 20 years, these factors have been significant for me. While preferences vary, a well-crafted video aside, mismanagement in places like California and NYC, often attributed to Democratic governance, underscores contrasting challenges.
Nicely done. As a person that has lived in USA for a very long time, I often compare the cost of living to earnings and the purchasing power between two. I feel that America is a trap to keep you working even if you save a lot....because health insurance needs will force you to have it. I feel India is not the same. If you have sufficient savings you can potentially retire early and have a good quality of life, and not worry about having to pay arm and a leg to maintain insurance. America is certainly not a country with the roads paved in gold as many Indians believe. People also believe that everyone is doing well here in USA, because that's what we as professionals are exposed to...but the reality is there is so much poverty here and neighborhoods that are unimaginable. Great job in covering this topic!!
Great video as always👏 but the other thing you guys forgot to mention is education, its a HUGE part of every indian. The education system here is so screwed that even if you are among the top 1% of the entire spectrum you can't make it into NIT's/IIT's(for advanced).the acceptance rate of harvard stands at 3.2% significantly better than any decent/good college in india. If you don't work hard and by working hard i mean literally getting rid of your social life, entertainment the dream of studying in a Tier-1 university shatters. Unlike abroad the avg package detoriate at a much higher rate as you go to the lower end of the spectrum. The population is the downfall and the strength of india but as a individual person this population is responsible for the extreme hardships faced by a fellow indian.if you earn 25k a month you fall in top 5-10% of the indian population. What is the quality of life for anyone that falls in this category/lower? We took a look at the situations faced by maybe the top 5% of the indian population but the sad state is its much much worse for the rest 95%. The sad truth is you get better returns and quality of life for the work you put in,abroad.
@blackcat-mp7kh thats totally untrue. I talked about ivy leagues through the example of Harvard which provides better returns despite being easier to get into. The avg package from IIT bombay is 21.82LPA acc to 2023 so idk on what basis you are claiming 20-30LPA through tier 3-4 city colleges while they may be earning such amounts later on in life earning that based on their degreee from those college is simply not happening except maybe 1 in 100,000 scenarios.
I seriously doubt this stat where people earning 25k falling into top 10%. It doesn't match with the groud reality of people having big buildings even in smaller towns. There might be lot of unaccounted money which people earn in unorganised sector.
This was a really good video and drawing comparisons from actual experience that you had there was really informative. Makes one questions lot of things. Keep it up guys, truly outstanding!.
Yip, I am 57. Born and raised in Africa. South African citizen. Lived 7 yrs in India from 15yrs of age to 22. In the 80's. Kerala and Karnataka. Travelled to over 30 countries - US many times. Lived briefly in the UK too. I visit India, at least twice a year India was awesome in the '80s. Even better and very nice now. So affordable irdable too. Also improves each time I visit. South Africa - I am lucky to live in better places. Its really nice here. Crime is high but not as high as South side of Chicago etc. Very western in 'white' areas and African people are most humane - like family. So its a good suburban life, good roads 😂, restaurants, shopping malls, excellent housing, gyms, parks etc. Can help - good maids, gardenners etc too. So yes, your views are spot on. Nicely done.
I also told my parents that I prefer to be here in our country rather than being in USA or Canada, because I know our country will become developed country
Closed, Collective and Hypothetical cultures vs Open Individualistic and Independent cultures - that was the first thing which I evaluated when I felt like migrating to West at the age of 33. Dogmas Deities Hero Worships and Blind beliefs make predominant part of our culture whether we are interested in them or not. And compared to that part of India - any negatives of Western culture looked minuscule to me. Now I am 48 and raised two kids and still feeling strong and positive about living in a place which fits my mindset and thought process - and till today I never compared the salaries here and there. First 6 years here I lived pay check to pay check - still it is totally worth - not in the lines of money - there is some thing called sastisfaction in life - I had this same satisfaction when I lived in India while working in the Government set up for 4 years teaching in Govt Hospital for just 15,000 rupees, Point is migration is not for money for everyone. Youngsters should keep that in mind.
@@harigovind7845 I moved to Tanzania in 2007 as a consultant radiologist - prepared for USMLE exams while working and making money - finished all exams by 2009 and 2010 I started my Radiology training in America - 2015 got a job at Emory University and 2016 Green Card as I am well published in academics and 2022 got my Citizenship and me and my brother got our parents also here. That is my story in a nutshell. Problems are everywhere, that is. a different topic.
@@bibhachoubey545 , then you are on the right track - and I still do it - both financially donating money as well as teaching radiology in my mother institutions on a regular basis. Recently, I started a RUclips channel for education and science in Telugu, my mother tongue, too - to educate people on science - as I believe - that scientific temperament itself brings a humungous change in society. Nice meeting you here
Now I am 20 but when I am 7 like that I used to have an American dream just by watching tv shows and movies although I don't know what it was just. Years passed now stopped dreaming
Ur 20 you don't know anything about the world enough to make a judgement on how it is to be in the US, it's easy to watch videos and come to a conclusion
@@saboteur43 no not, only top 1 percent can afford such a trip, it makes no sense to spend a yearly wage of an average Indian just on flight tickets.. make money there and enjoy in India and rest of the world, that's the best strategy.. make sure to retire in India.
Such a wonderful informative video. It was literally an eye opener for me, my friends & also family members. I have many of my relatives staying in USA & Canada but they never speak up about their struggles so we never knew the reality. Thanks for spreading the awareness. Keep it up!!! I really loved Dora also as she is so damn cute
Things are so good in India that people take the dunky route &give up 50 -60 lakh to cross through Mexico or Canada &work here illegally &stay here for life time
@@indian-fc8md if you hate India, that's your choice, but don't spout toxic sh*t to others And everyone is not following donkey route, not even 0.001% of youth We believe in our country, we'll work for it ❤❤
Dude, don’t form opinions based on some random video covering just 2 cities, on top of that they are just a tourist, there is a big flaw here.. Unless someone lives in a country for 2 years, experience their systems, process, schooling, driving around, visiting a doc, and so on, only then you will get an overall picture.. 98% of Indians who come to US, never return back to India. This data point simply debunks this video..
I'm student living in lucknow and for my expense I'm earning 8.5k per month and I am not taking money from my parents for monthly expenses. It's an eye opening video let's make india 🇮🇳 great.
This video is making me feel so good about living in India. And hats off to your team for what you are doing, your dreams definitely look way bigger than what yall are today. We will together make India great again.
Bruh, the amount of editing and the level of this video is awesome, you're so underrated you deserve millions of subscribers....keep it up your awesome god level video😊
@@ghxst1607 Criticizing is okay, if one deserves to be appreciated then it goes the same for Criticizing. But by the OG comment, I was referring to the literal disrespect they do to India.
Who tf is editing these videos , he should get an Oscar for this ... TERRIFIC
They have editing course also Ig
He is most probably from the marketing team of Aevy tv 😄
What is so special in this?
@@LifeGeneralist its crazy, once you start editing by yourself, you will understand why we are really impressed by the editing style
You can learn how to edit like us too: aevytv.com
My hypothesis is that Indians go the America for one of 3 reasons:
1. To save money
2. To escape family
3. To escape society
If you don't have one of these 3 problems, India is likely the better choice in the long term. But people who want to stay a short term in the US would end up making a much bigger corpus than they can ever in India. The PPP argument applies to only those planning to live in the US.
@@AndWeWillNeverBeAloneAgain they could, but the frequency of visit is lower when one is abroad vs within India. So, not total BS. People tell me they've left India to escape family all the time - especially women who don't want to stay with in laws.
perfect statement..you are only one who got it... not her. she is just young and she shd not make such videos without any experience..people living short term or even for 10 yrs plu sor minus will be most benefitted as you said..that is what i alread y realized and planning move back now.. it is not bcs india is good alternative
I have the same thoughts
Young people are to much uncomfortable these days, they are living in fast paced emotional, insecure roller coaster...
it's not their problem
It's the change that happening in our social febric all around the world
I left India 20 yrs ago for higher education and better life. Happy so far!
Very true. I did it in 1979.
Ok, I'm not Indian, I'm from south America but I really like this channel and despite that supposedly we don't have much in common I can say that I learn a lot with you guys, thanks a lot.
Sometimes Protecting your capital is much more important than making money. Basically because if you lose your capital, making money is much harder no matter the country you find yourself. ''Missing the train'' vs. ''losing your money''. There are a lot of trains, but if your money is gone, it's over.
Nobody knows anything, you need to create your own process, manage risk and stick to the plan, through thick or thin ,While also continuously learning from mistakes and improving.
Many overlook that banks are return-driven businesses. I don't trust keeping a large sum in a bank. Instead, I invest with guidance, enjoy the benefits, and save for retirement.
After the '08 financial crisis, I've learned not to trust corporations. Since 2020, I've been investing with a financial advisor and have had no major losses, so I'm not going back to relying solely on banks.
@@LucasBenjamin-hv7sk Market behavior can be complex and unpredictable. Mind if I ask you to recommend this particular coach to whom you have used their services?
Market behavior can be complex and unpredictable. Mind if I ask you to recommend this particular coach to whom you have used their services?
Forget the American Dream
Lets Create the Indian Dream
only dream 😅
🇮🇳❤️🔥
Vote for chai. Keep dreaming.
I ❤ USA
@@Jesssco Atlest this chai person is doing something. Your favourite canditate has swapped his brain for fresh cow dung.
THe moment he cretes a machine where by inserting potato on one side and gold come out the other side he will win. Till then shut the fuck up and continue the research for they machine.
I'm an Indian who is now living in USA. While growing up in India in a developing nation I used to think that to have a good life, all I have to do is move to a developed country. But after moving to America, a developed nation, I realized that to have a good life in a developed country, you have to work harder than a developing country, there are absolutely no breaks, labour is not cheap so you have to work hard a lot throughout the day. Now I understand why developed nation is developed. If you move from a developing nation to a developed nation and don't start working harder physically and mentally then you will remain poor in a developed country.
Good insight. Would love to hear about more over the same
The working conditions in India are just as bad in usa. even worse actually. The problem is that for the amount of work u do u do not get the money u deserve in India. But u do get the money in usa. Also the huge population is the biggest burden in India. There is competition in every field. And a lot of times deserving skilled people don't get what they deserve here. Even the exams which is the best way for an Indian to get a job are rigged. So yeah there are definitely advantages of moving to a developed country. You have to work harder anywhere in the world. It's about what u want in life.
Actually, 100k dollars is a very respectable salary. You are in the top 6 percent of Americans btw.
@@manan-543exams are rigged 😢 so true bro 😭
Indians in similar jobs work harder in India. Work life balance is much better in US
I would be happy living like a king in developing country and help my country grow rather than working like slaves in a so called rich country which is not my own. So much of materliasm in west, we will definitely get broke. We have never grown up this way.
I totally agree with you. I lived in USA for about 1.5 years. Travelled extensively. I was in disbelief because while growing up, we used to watch all good things about the USA in movies. But the reality is far different. In the end me and my wife decided that it's not worth to waste our lives in USA and we moved back to India. BTW, before coming back, we did a roadtrip around the USA. We were on road for 37 days and covered east coast to west cost via south and then went back from west coast to east coast via north. I'm planning to upload the videos of my travel journey soon!
USA > India
Beautiful do post it and the link here
Pls upload
Did you had a green card in USA? because most of the people that came back to India didnt had or couldnt get a green card.
Poor Indian people would be rich in Africa that doesn't make them rich .
That Starbucks bit scared the shit out of me. Hats off to the animation and sound design
The animation part and her reaction are the scary part lol
I have been in such situations, it is not so scary
Don't worry, that only happens in San Francisco and a few other places. The rest of the US is pretty good.
@@ntl9974 it should be, considering you could be robbed blind and nobody will help you. I thought police in India were apathetic (which they are), but this is something else.
@@superneenjaa718 You could be, but you are not 99.9% of the time
Just like rape accusations in India. It's silly to react such a way
@@ntl9974 I probably won’t be scared, but for a woman I think it would be distressing especially after witnessing burglary happening left and right. What does it have anything to do with “rape accusations in India”, Like it doesn’t happen anywhere else?
American Indian, living in the U.S. for 24 years now. Here's my perspective - a LOT of things have changed since the U.S. boom period of ex-President Bill Clinton. That era was the absolute best time to move to the U.S. Homelessness was always a part of the U.S., but if you knew how to read a JAVA book, you had a job in the mid to late 90s. I personally know Veterinarian docs who shifted to IT during those days and made a killing. Today's U.S. is entirely different - highly competitive, technology changing every week (if not sooner) and a huge pool of talent available. Combine that with a rising inflation, geo-political dynamics, and you get the U.S. of today. It still is (by many standards) one of the best countries to live in, but it's definitely not the U.S. of the golden era. This is fact.
You said it and it will be better country to live in than India in future too. It will always be relative, except US should pay India to provide well educated person for which they did not spend any money on.
interesting..
@@HershGoel-f2fWait by 2025! US Bankruptcy is real shit. Economy will collapse. Just wait and watch. You know nothing bro. Also, US Independence charter calls you Indians as Savage Indian beasts. So beware, racism will increase. Think before you speak lad.
I totally agree. My parents immigrated to the US from India in the 90s. Nowadays, everything is super expensive, and salaries haven't yet caught up with the increased cost of living. Those fresh out of university who are just starting their career have to live paycheck to paycheck if they can't stay with their parents until they move higher up the corporate hierarchy. They spend almost everything they earn just to live. If you can't afford a car like many people, public transportation here is awful, so it's better to have a bicycle, because that actually is faster! NYC has better public transportation, but everything else there is ridiculously expensive, so it's better to live somewhere else.
You nailed it! Been in the US for 25 years and I 100% agree.
Great video! As an engineer in Silicon Valley, I agree with the pros and cons discussed. However, the work hours and the work culture can be more demanding than often depicted and is not as good as many people assume it to be.
Hey do you think is it worth it to do masters in usa
@@iamuzumakianduchiha776 Instead of doing masters, better invest that huge sum of money on Indian stock market, you'll get better income than working in US
Bhai ....dont think the Work culture in India is ANY LESS DEMANDING ....its even worse with no WORK-LIFE balance !
@@iamuzumakianduchiha776 That's a huge question with a lots of pros and cons, so you need to take a decision based on your own necessity
@@akshaybp456 oh ok
Most Indian who are settled in US don't stay in these super big cities...smaller cities such as Charlotte, Atlanta, Dallas are definitely not like this ....
Dallas is notorious for it's crime
You yapping w/o knowing anysht
still better than any place in india
americans also living in villages in india not in major cities ,get your brains clear first. they want our village life they construct companies here in village eradicating indians farming and agriculture.
if you put a step in New York, new Jersey , SFO , San Jose you will cross minimum 2-3 Indian every 10-15 min .
Lived in the US for over 25 years and moved back to India a couple of years ago. You're absolutely spot on regarding past American living. Things have been changing considerably and will continue to change in the future as well. Many countries are using America as a template for success and slowly getting smarter and moving towards reducing the gap. India has to improve in many areas which we all already know. Most importantly, the mindset has to change to put country/sate/city/colony/street first. Every action, no matter how small, in the right direction will bring about change for all to see a better India! I would LOVE to see that India in my lifetime!
Hey what about if someone saves money in us and send it to India to their parents and purchased a building,mall,hospital after that enjoy the rest of life in India?
I also told my parents that I love India because we all know India will definitely become developed country!!!!🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳
Like in 100 years!
India
What a joke!
I hate India being a general caste citizen of india
Government does absolute nothing for us
And India is just trash!
exactly yeah there are better countries to go to actually live a quality life
I used to think about it in the same way until I saw 2024 lok sabha election results.
Bro you shoud not speak so true @@rollsroyce4249
This is literally Gold Conetent for all the Students like me just starting out and who are overwhelmed by options! Thank you Guys!!!
Dude she only talked about two of the worst cities to live in. I was in Utah for 2 years and it didn’t have most of these problems. So take an informed decision than listening to just one sided nonsense
@@amnagrawalhey is utah livable..? Like I'll be immigrating to US so should I choose Utah over Texas..? Like is it worth ? How are the prices and is real estate good ..?
abe gade comments to pad le pehle... aankh band krke kisi pe phi kya bharosa krke thank you bolra h.
Another point to consider. If you go as a student, you go on a F visa. You get max 2 years of OPT (optional practical training) period after you graduate during which time you can work and apply for H1B which is obtained through a lottery. So you get two to three chances to be in the lottery, and if you are lucky, you get your H1B. H1B must be renewed every three years, and you have to come to your home country every time to get the new visa stamp. During these 6 years, your employer must apply for a green card for you, otherwise you'd have to return after the 6 years of H1B are exhausted. The green card application process (just the submission) takes around one year, minimum. Once the application has been submitted, you can get your H1B renewed as long as your GC application is in the queue. But remember on H1B, you can not pursue your own startup (without some extraordinary situations involving expensive lawyers and lots of money), not can you one day decide that you want to try being something other than whatever role your H1B was granted for (say a software engineer). And if you lose your job, you have 60 days to get a new job and a new H1B (which takes from 3 to four weeks) otherwise you have to return home.
Finally, the GC queue at this time is really long. One report from last year says 134 years for an Indian applicant.
Consider these factors before you make the jump. There are going to be challenges everywhere, but I hope all young people are well informed before they make such life changing decisions. Best of luck for whatever you decide.
I’ve just found myself coming to the thing that most spiritual text talk about: “Find peace within yourself first”. There’s any options and many paths. It can be confusing. Just evaluate your situation, ask an AI assistant if required and come to your own conclusions. People will keep being engaged and try to engage you in a shouting contest. If there’s anything I’d hope you use to discern - it’s what you can perceive as negative and what is positive for you. Just get the facts and the rest are all just opinions. Putting down one country in favour of another is not going to serve anyone any good.
Amazing content! I have been following your videos for sometime now, consistently kicking down Wall Street doors for two years now, I have over $320k in stocks. Currently, my portfolio is down by 15%. Wondering if they're any short term opportunities I can invest in.
I agree that there are strategies that could be put in place for solid gains regardless of economy or market condition, but such executions are usually carried out by investment experts or advisors with experience
Reason I decided to work closely with an brokerage-adviser ever since the market got really tensed and the pressure became so much(I should be retiring in 17months) so I've had an brokerage-adviser guide me through the chaos, its been 9months and counting and I've made approx. 650K net from all of my holdings.
How can I participate in this? I sincerely aspire to establish a secure financlal future and am eager to participate. Who is the driving force behind your success?
Elisse Laparche Ewing is the licensed fiduciary I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.
She appears to be well-educated and well-read. I ran an online search on her name and came across her website; thank you for sharing.
As someone living in America, I can validate everything she's saying.
American Dream is a fluff. No one is talking about the realities of staying here. This is a good video.
Ohk come back and live the Indian dream
then what keeps you there?
@@caracaraorange9524 Yes tell man
My student debt is in dollars.
@@onkarsawantbhosle3146 bs. you want to stay for the good life
America is not just New York or California, there is a huge contrast of how people view it from outside to what actually the whole of America looks like. The more woke places, which are the big cities in America are having the worst time.
If people are trying to speak out they're are woke 😅😅😅😅
Logical arguments don’t work on RUclips
Yes City Folk in America spend alot , but also they make double to triple what rural Americans make,
These guys don't know see anything from the pov of oppressed@@baikeiast5255
you are brainrot to the core so much that you think the world is separated by woke and non - woke people. lol
Dream destroyed in 27 minutes straight.
That starbucks part literally creeped me out
i am glad i realised this in my early teens, 2 decades ago, and i never developed any other country dream in the first place. all the negative facts she mentioned, were true and to the ground; and must be considered instead of just getting happy with the movies. yes they all have guns, they have stupid laws, there are poor/homeless people, educated but homeless people, and thousand other things which would make you vomit. Our country is still a lot better in some ways, although we need constant improvement in so many levels anyway.
This is such a bullshit comparison. I have lived in the US as a student. And you just cannot compare living in India with US. The cultures are different, the life is different. As she said at the start of her video, how do you put a price tag on clean air.
You can get the same advantages moving to a lower PPP economy than India. But did it cross your mind to compare your life with it and move to that country? No, because the intangible comparisons are hard to make.
Land in the US and the first breath you take, you can feel the difference. It's like living in Darjeeling with the view of Delhi. Our food is adulterated, water is contaminated, hygiene is non existent, roads are pot holled and traffic is congesting. You cannot do a PPP comparison of life here with a developed country.
@@realracing3specter295 Homicide rate is highly dependent on where you live. You have more chances of dying from lightening strike than a mass shooting. Compare it with the cities in UP and you'll see that we are no safer.
They have stupid laws? Really? You think India has more freedom than the US? 100s of reporters in jail for tweeting against Modiji will disagree with you.
Homelessness in US vs India? You've got to be blind or highly privileged to not see how bad homelessness is here. In the US, the only reason you are homeless is if you are on drugs and deny taking govt. housing. Any person who is homeless and wants to have a roof over is head is provided by the state. Homeless people in the US are mostly drug addicts. Come on a tour with me in Delhi and I'll show you what actual poverty looks like.
USA isn't perfect but unless you are making shit loads of money in India, life here is way tougher than in the US. Now let me take your leave and switch on the air purifier, because the very freaking air we breathe needs to be cleaned up.
fr i was about to say the same thing
@@mathurp6889 i agree with most of your points. But even american food is terrible. That's why its the most obese countries in the world. it's a country where coke is cheaper than a bottle of water. Big food corporations are ruining people's health for their profits. and being a capitalist economy no one can say anything against big companies.
You are doing a great job helping the youth take informed decisions.. I stopped my niece going to Canada last year and she is so thankful knowing what she knows now! Well done Aevy TV!
I remember 10 years back when I visited Texas, we didn't know about the tipping culture. The Cab costed us $58. $50 was readily available and then I started giving the driver $1 at a time till I have given him 8 notes and then I said done. The absolute look of disappointment he gave on my very first day in US I will not forget. Later after knowing the tipping culture I realised where I goofed up 😂
And still it's called developed country is funny
Very anti consumer 😂😂 and begging
$50 just for a cab lol.
@@vibhutisrivastava2789that's why they are earning $100k pa as per the video
?? I took an uber last week and it costed me only $13
@@syedhussaini8064 The motel we booked was far from the airport.
This is crazy. I just had a conversation a few hours ago with an american, a brit and a new zealender of the same job as me and we got to salaries and initially was feeling why i was getting paid so less but the conversation soon went into comparative salaries and expenses and realised I'm actually doing better than them. And the american was talking about all these problems of homelessness and the law of not getting punished for theft of less than 1000 usd. So weird
Like the law is great here, or there is no homeless 😂😂
@sarveshlobana8573 there is a huge difference. The homelessness scenario is not the same. A staggering number of drug addicts out there
@@sarveshlobana8573 You have no idea the horror of homelessness in USA. The homeless in India don't threaten you, they are just poor miserable on the street.
that is just california. indians in usa are ever increasing in numers. richest in america are indians
@@sarveshlobana8573 The homeless population here is literally homeless. As in they don't have a house, so they live in railway stations etc with their entire families. They aren't violent or dangerous. You'll hardly ever hear of a street-dweller attacking someone. They're just families who can't afford housing. As opposed to people with drug issues and whatnot.
This is an incredibly high quality video. Kudos AevyTV.
I was in America for my masters and did not get picked up in H1b. I was there from 2009-2014. I have lived in SF, North Carolina, Connecticut, Orlando and America was a very different place at that time. It really was just like in the movies. The drug and homeless crisis was not that bad and cost of living, even though high, was not this bad. It is only in the last few years that these issues have exponentially exploded.
Another thing that is not discussed about studying and working in America is loneliness/depression. Most of my friends have gone through it due to varios reasons like away from family, breakups, feeling like an outsider, etc. It gets much worse once you get out of the study phase and get a job. In college, you still have frieds and good roommates. Once you get a job, you are usually working most of the time and time you suddenly have a large income you really dont know what to do with(roommates at this phase are also working and dont have time to socialize). Many Indians just go bonkers with their spending. I have personally suggested and helped 2 of my close friends to come back to India and they are doing really well here.
Its not all doom and gloom yet though you have a good support system and are able to mingle with Americans well, you will do juat fine there.
Only people who are stuck in India know the real value of America, American society, life is atleast 1000x better than India' regressive
If you can earn 30L per annum in India, don't be stupid, just stay in India, You can go on a holiday if you love to experience foreign cultures.
Only people that can live a compromised life and have plans to save money and return to India might think about leaving India, or people that want to expand their business. Other than that, please don't leave India and ruin your life.
Problem is when you earn 30L per anum, you have to pay 6L income tax. If you don’t own a house and you like to get one in a big city (probably where you work like Bengaluru) the cost would be 1.5CR minimum for a 2bhk apartment.
And end up Paying hefty premium for cars, bikes and phones etc…
Only food is affordable in big cities in india.
@@cybersrikanth You'll be rolling when you get to know, you have to pay similar taxes in developed countries too and cost of living is way higher and forget about owning your own house. And if you're smart you can evade taxes in India quite easily using all the loopholes and our IT department is not as harsh as in other countries.
My comment is only for high earning individuals, if you are earning less you can make the compromise and leave India to earn money but if you're already earning well, India is the best place to live.
India is definitely not a great place for middle and upper middle class
Thankyou Aevy TV for making such amazing content. Love the editing and the way the script's written.
A few years back, I got mugged in Houston, and when the cops arrived 20 minutes later, they said it’s pretty normal here. I was shocked to hear from American cops that it’s not like Manhattan or Miami, where you safely roam in the the dark. Although their gentle and supportive tone helped calm my nerves, it made me realize that the idyllic America portrayed in movies is only the reality in a few places. In contrast, during my IIFA trip to NJ we roamed freely on the streets of NYC and spent good time in Miami Key West, and those experiences were unmatched and memorable
Dude, you are talking as if America is heaven like country. Show me one country where you dont get afraid of getting mugged, or robbed, or get shot or rape or murder. Except Antarctica and greenland I dont think there is 100% safe place. Every country has ghetto areas. Also you are talking about Houston which is in Texas and Texas is known for those kind of sh*t. So whatever you said id bullsh*t. And yes Cops were 100% right, its very normal in texas and few other states. Just like how India is unsafe in many many places.
I live in Houston suburbs lol. I notice there is police in every at&t and verizon store in houston area and I often wondered why. Anyways im so glad I never got mugged.
Have you not seen mugging scenes in Hollywood movies ?
@@ajayrm4673 Bhai, one can get robbed in India too and the cops here are useless. Why do we Indians feel the need to paint the US as some sort of apocalyptic lawless country? Is it to cope with the fact that we are not living there?
@@Kids11111 DONT BOTHER BRO..WHAT U SAID IS ABSOLUTELY TRUE
Best part about living and earning in America is visiting India. The dollar goes a long way 🙂
Yea a minimal $2k saved every month is basically BIG SHIT in India
@@lookeshdas455very big
@@lookeshdas455 Yup, but that only works if you plan to return to India at some point for good. If you continue to stay there, a savings of 24K a year is peanuts and basically the road to future homelessness. And the longer you stay there and get acclimatized to an American lifestyle and looking down upon Indians in India, the harder it will be for you to return knowing that the rest of your life will never live up to what you experienced in the US.
Dollar will go long way till it survives as global reserve currency. It is bound to crash by this decades or next. Trump, Elon musk, Ray dalio, have started to raise the alarm bells on the US debt status and De-dollarization. These are prominent figures and not your average tom dick and Harry.
You're doing a great job Achina! I know Varun from so long, I got to know today that you both are together.
Sending positive vibes for you in bonkers!!
If Indian didn't understand what American life is after watching this video than.... god save them. I am American Indian living in America from last 21 years. There is no more such thing like American dream. Wake up people.
i live in america,, these things dont bother us.. i live new jersey..the dream stil lexist.. if u say no then india is getting even worse. may be you shd look for other countries. .but the way people are syaing india is better is total dream and they are not being practical.. at all
I also lived in america... for almost 45 years.... I left 5 years ago.... i think it was the best decision that I ever made...
There's a saying....
"You have to be asleep to believe in the American Dream..."
The American Dream as we used to know it is over....
@@mruncletheredge not true at al..dont mislead the young generation l.. American dream still true
..I am planning to go back to India next yr..but I still know for young starters..america is still the best option...no doubt ...
lmao why do people think people move to the US to 'chase the American Dream'. A better work life balance is more than an enough reason to move. Cleaner air and streets are a big bonus too
@@amudhanbakthavathsalu5308 The American dream is iver. Wake up. I as an Indian have emigrated from USA to Portugal where I can get EU rights security, good Europeans local culture and not be k!lled by an immigrant or a dr#g dealer
It's my first time watching this channel and I am genuinely impressed at the quality of this. Also all the points were really balanced not prejudicing to any side. You earned my sub. Keep up the good work.
U FOR SURE HAVEN SET UR FOOT OUTSIDE INDIA..ANYWAY STAY HAPPY 😃
This channel had a shaky start but glad to see it's doing reasonably well.
Very well made, well spoken and well researched! kudos!
In my own experience the less you earn in India, it is more beneficial for you when you move to US. I am sure someone who previously earning 5 LPA salary in India and went to US will put a comment saying PPP does not matter and life in the US is so good. Some will even put long list of points about why everyone should try to go to US and why anyone who is not going is actually a big looser. I have been to that situation. At the beginning of my career I lived and worked in US for some years. That time it felt like winning a jackpot. However, now as I am earning well in India, I do see both pros and cons. Now India works better for me and I turned down offer for internal transfer to US for many times in recent past.
Which industry do you work in and in what role?
@@kshitijwalwaikar5968 software architect in a big tech company
@@kshitijwalwaikar5968+1
Incredible
India is the sweet spot to live,not in a developed area,cuz people don't give a fck, moderately developed areas are very comfortable psychologically and physically near to the nature
holy, the editing. IT IS SO PERFECTTTTTTTTTTTT. hats off to whoever edited this, got me goosebumps
U NEED MORE BUMPS
Incredible and eye opening video... Hatsoff to your efforts and hatsoff to the editor!
Let me tell you as a foreigner being Indian who has for the most part lived outside of India multiple countries multiple places . That when she says India has a long way to go.- I realised how long that is in numbers it's 30 years + in terms of development .
That's my India will always has , will. And stay as developing nation . Unless our own youth catalyses the process and narrowing that developmental gap.
I'm in that power and I'm a person whose striving to take part and effort to narrow this gap in field of Biotechnology. Development
Me doing the alone cannot bring a difference we need all youths from all departments to stand for their cause and work to bring actions and implementation to see the results. We so desire.
I hope like minded people can reflect my POV .
Kudos to Avey Tv bringing such topics in to light.
Best regards to all. Take care
loved the editing and the content and every single second of the video!!!!
any day cafe coffee day?
I am waiting for the video of exact concept till now since 2years….was searching for the same in youtube.
I appreciate the effort and work of the crewmates in making video possible.
Thank you!
2 ads in a single video! odoo and video editing masterclass! wow! youtube is becoming the new television! i have premium, yet cant skip ads promoted by creators!
use sponsorblock, it auto skips sponsor segments. you can use the chrome web extension or the revanced youtube app.
Agreed, it's rather annoying.
We can't expect quality content without marketing, directly or indirectly everyone does it, atleast she is not promoting anything wrong 11 11
RUclips is a free platform, but videos like this cost a lot to produce, so I don't mind creators taking up sponsors or promoting their own product.
If you don't like it, just skip forward
Look I pay for YT premium, to not see ads, yet the creators advertise in addition to RUclips ads which is just rubbish... Imagine not paying for premium and watching 4 unskipable ads. Sheer nonsense!
Cost of healthcare in the USA:
- Ambulance ride: $500
- Doctor's visit: $250-500
- Hospital stay: $5000 per night
- ICU stay: $10,000 per night
- Pregnancy (ordinary): $10,000
- Pregnancy (C-section): $20,000
I believe, PPP captures only the cost of food, not rent, healthcare, or insurance. Nice video!
That's literally 80x. Except the ambulance, thats 40x.
The income, only 10x-15x
In any decent city in india, rickshaw drivers are also earning 40-50k . Their wives earning 25k doing cooking and cleaning jobs. Their children being able to compleete a degree and get an internship. Hardworking Indians are going ok.
True
No auto driver earns that much and no one can earn 25k as a maid. Their children are able to compete because of reservations.
@@manasi92 25k is some thing which is common even in Hyderabad if they work in 4 houses
@@podadi I don't think so, here in Mumbai maids are paid 1k-2k for small chores. Cooks might be paid higher.
@@manasi92in rural India, small town in odisha I give my house help 1k per month only for sweeping and cleaning utensils.. that's almost 30 min per day of work.. are you serious in Mumbai it's 1k..
I was in Los Angeles my first ever trip to the states and only for a week; and while it was different, fascinating and beautiful I realized how little I desired to move there, because something also felt very cold and isolating about the city… you captured all the observations I too had, and came back to India feeling ever more committed to working and building my country! Thank you for putting this out there 🙏🏼
if u hv no family or real friends at a place, any city feels cold
@@varunishere 💯
@@varunishere nah... its not just that, even if you have family and frnds there it just doesnt hit especially if you grew up in gali moholle of india lol
Obviously, you missed people spitting paan, the dirt, chaotic traffic, slums, filth, racism, caste system, pooping on streets, illiterate people , flaunting of rules , slums , corruption. A fly of gutter will only thrive Ina gutter. Thank you for making it easier for us to migrate . Wish all you
Pajeets thought similarly
@@vedanttaneja8578 thanks for leaving you wont be missed
Now a days, the content u guys produce makes people connect more emotionally instead of just watching it for insights. I love the video.
You pretty much summed it up very well. A very real and concise video!
(Lived in Bangalore 11 years, currently live here in the US the last 19 years)
How old are you
A very informative video, thoroughly research and its good to see someone who have been there discussion the pros and cons instead of just throwing numbers.
Some of it was thoroughly researched, and some of it was just cobbled together with a lot of misinformation sprinkled here and there.
There goes your credibility LOL
Los Angeles, San Francisco and New York City are the most expensive place to live in the US. There are thousands of cheaper options...
The editing is on point and the narration is awesome. Literally, have seen some many videos on this topic but this one was genuinely refreshing.
This is how long-form content should be! Awesome video.
This is the best ever video made in this topic. RUclips should give a silver plaque just for this video!!!
I'm from NJ and I went to SF many years ago with my friend. I had the same experience as the Starbucks incident...My friend and I were waiting to be picked up on a Sunday morning at a bus stop by a tour company since we were going to Napa Valley for a wine tour. It was 8am and there were homeless people all around and it seemed like we were in a zombie movie. I would say to my knowledge years ago there was a large mental asylum in Arizona that shut down and gave patients a one-way ticket to SF, Portland Oregon, and I forget the third city, but it's no surprise those cities now have major drug and homeless problems. While I do agree with this video to an extent, as an American with Indian parents, I do think she is generalizing a bit....It's really difficult to generalize things with America because like India, each state is very different, not to mention our laws are highly decentralized, so laws that exist in California don't often exist in NJ or NY. Also, I know she is giving amounts of housing and so forth in INR, but it's not a completely fair comparison because you have to consider the rent to how much you are earning in USD. While the US has a lot of problems, I can say that my parents probably do have a better quality of life in the US than in India. It's true we don't have regular house help (though my mom does pay my neighbor to make a few meals and so forth) and my parents had to work very hard, my father who has lived in the US for the past 40 years, still retains his Indian citizenship for sentimental reasons, and went to an IIT school and left a good job in india to come to the US, acknowledges that he wouldn't have been able to save as much money or help his family back in India (building a house for my grandparents, etc.). even if he worked his whole life in India (with white money alone)...just giving some perspective, but maybe a lot of things have changed since then.
A GUY COMING FROM A PLACE WHERE IN EVERY TRAFIC SIGNEL ONE CAN SEE A BEGGING BOWL
I never thought about getting goosebumps over here...
But Aevy TV pleasantly surprised me...
Such an amazing video. I just loved listening you. It was great explanation, personally liked your analysis and you were aptly able to put things in place. Great buddy. Kepe going. You earned a subscriber her.
what analysis, bereft of real data.
THATS THE BEST THING U DID .MARK THE DAY..U ARE NOW IN THE TOP 1 %OF CREAM IN THE WORLD
Beautifully documented. This would be an eye opener for many.
You explain really well!!
"You can't put a price on clean air", says the person eating the most unhealthy food in the world. Even the raw veggies you get from Whole Foods is unhealthy and inorganic. My friends have developed various allergies and gained weight disproportionately after eating in the US (even home cooked). Food and healthcare are the reason I moved back to India permanently after 6 years in the US.
I agree, The food is much better and healthier in India
Looks like someone was not picked up in H1B draw...Grapes are indeed sour here!
@@tarun4629 looks like someone hasn't done their calculations. Without H1B, it is impossible to stay 6 years in the US. My green card application was filed and I decided to forfeit it
@@tarun4629 nope , trust me EU is far better in terms of lifestyle than US , US is basically developed version of india with lots of cons , only thing it does well is paying software engineers well that too at a huge cost of living. you should live in a proper EU country like Denmark , Germany or Netherlands then you will understand the hell and heaven difference, my sister was literally walking at 2am at night alone in Germany still not afraid whereas u try that shit in US best of luck . US is only good for earning money to send to money not for living permanently
@@avikde9631 Dude ! Are you serious ? Walking in the streets of germany at 2 AM !!! It blew my mind
loved your way of explaining and edits 👌🏼
Kya zabardast video banayi hai boss, ek number editing, amazing story telling and effects, truly got me stuck to the video.
Toxic work culture in corporate in India also main reason for people going out , for. A healthy work culture is important more than money
AIR, ROADS ,HEALTH, HYGINE , TRANSPORT ,EASY AT WHICH THINGS GET DONE ARE EXCELLENT IN INDIA ..I HAVE LIVED THERE FOR 30 YEARS
Beautiful Video! I have lived in new York city before and currently live in Michigan, and $100K here goes very far here compared to New York. Just a basic comparison (1 Gallon of milk costs $8 in New york, where as you can get the same can for almost $4 in other states. Furthermore, to the analysis made in the video, is how expensive your living is. People in the US are so used to buying expensive things (clothes/electronics) regardless of their income. I believe it is mostly to show off or the government and corporate monopolies has been running an agenda of expensive is best, buying cheaper products like non-organic stuff would cause cancer, etc.
Well, your comparison covers only SF & NY. Which are non representative of entire US. There are cities in the US where you get apartments for 900 bucks. 100k in NYC is s-hit, but in Baltimore would be a really decent salary
But there you wont get jobs
@@kbshrivastav8539lol I stay in Naperville and I work in AI.. who says one has to stay in big cities ? Ppl live in suburbs all the time..and if someone were to stay in nyc salary is not 100k.. a software engineer in nyc makes 200k or more .. in any city of usa a software engineer will make more than India
Lmao that's like tier 2-3 city of america
@@SP-xt7tyNot everyone can't be a software engineer.
@@anilkumargupta8555even a tier 3 city of usa is better than tier 1 city of India 😂
Hard times creates strong man,
Strong man create good times,
Good time creats weak man,
Weak man creats hard times
AB LOVE DAY HILA
So strong man need to stop creating good times then
she got inspired from cloe Abraham for this form of editing and camera angle
tru
even her dog haha
Cleo Abram and Johnny Harris, Vox media to RUclipsrs. Aevy seems to be trying to blend both and make it better.
Oh that's why this feels familiar
Cleo*
Crazy storytelling and editing. Kudos to the Aevy team ❤
Europe is a better place when compared to Indiia and US.The salary,labour laws, laws and QUALITY of Life are much better.
Muslim immigrants have destroyed Europe,India is best
Sure but they get paid way less than American. The Company I work for has offices around the world. The Europeans get less salary than say an American, Canadian and an Australian.
Not to mention there is way more racism in Europe than in the US. The US isn't perfect...far from it...but at least they recognize their problems. In Europe, especially countries like France, they refuse to talk about race and racism, but it's a very big problem, especially for Indians.
Eupore is becoming like pakisthan with allowing of illegal immigrants that live freely with your tax payer money and loot , kill and ra pe people in name of religion.
@@TMD-xo5qeracism is everywhere
Wow! Amazing narration and editing and the message. It blew my mind. Great work.
Love this video. Excellent excellent. Not enough praise for the work you guys are doing
As an Indian who has shifted to the US 2 years back, I totally agree with all the points. It’s a very subjective debate to compare both the economies based on personal lifestyle preferences. End of the day the cost of being away from your family cannot be matched but that can vary from person to person.
Yes finally some people pretend it is a black and white decision. No it is not. It may vary person to person.
Deshdrohi
R U IN JAIL HERE..DID SOMEONE STOP U FROM GOING BACK
Absolutely great video!!! Great start, great mid and super awesome conclusion.
You had me at "why I wanna stay here" ❤ I was born in canada and came to India when I was 19 for emergency with my parents.
And ever since I have never went back! Love indian lifestyle, india traveling, landscape, people. Everything ❤
In India, the abundance of labor stems from a large population, contributing to its affordability. A hallmark of developed nations is the dignity of labor, ensuring fair treatment and the ability to save for the future without relying on connections. Clean roads, spacious environments, and mutual respect are cultivated over decades. Adherence to environmental regulations and maintaining litter-free spaces are national endeavors that improve overall quality of life. Whether dropping kids at school, enjoying a stroll in a large park, or embarking on road trips in an RV, these experiences are invaluable to those who cherish them. The structured life of order comes with its costs, where living in suburbs often means avoiding high expenses and enjoying a better cost of living. Moreover, quick police response and the bravery of firefighters during emergencies are truly commendable. Having lived here for over 20 years, these factors have been significant for me. While preferences vary, a well-crafted video aside, mismanagement in places like California and NYC, often attributed to Democratic governance, underscores contrasting challenges.
This intricate explanation made so much sense. Great research work 🔥
She's so brave to take the video of that homeless person talking to themself. That takes guts
It was a selfie video, she pro'ly acted like she was taking a video of herself but zommed in and took a video of the homeless person.
she did not take that video, i saw it months ago on a reel by a meme page on ig. she just used it for reference
Nicely done. As a person that has lived in USA for a very long time, I often compare the cost of living to earnings and the purchasing power between two. I feel that America is a trap to keep you working even if you save a lot....because health insurance needs will force you to have it. I feel India is not the same. If you have sufficient savings you can potentially retire early and have a good quality of life, and not worry about having to pay arm and a leg to maintain insurance.
America is certainly not a country with the roads paved in gold as many Indians believe. People also believe that everyone is doing well here in USA, because that's what we as professionals are exposed to...but the reality is there is so much poverty here and neighborhoods that are unimaginable.
Great job in covering this topic!!
Thank you so much for the spreadsheet, guys! 😊😊
Great video as always👏 but
the other thing you guys forgot to mention is education, its a HUGE part of every indian. The education system here is so screwed that even if you are among the top 1% of the entire spectrum you can't make it into NIT's/IIT's(for advanced).the acceptance rate of harvard stands at 3.2% significantly better than any decent/good college in india. If you don't work hard and by working hard i mean literally getting rid of your social life, entertainment the dream of studying in a Tier-1 university shatters. Unlike abroad the avg package detoriate at a much higher rate as you go to the lower end of the spectrum. The population is the downfall and the strength of india but as a individual person this population is responsible for the extreme hardships faced by a fellow indian.if you earn 25k a month you fall in top 5-10% of the indian population. What is the quality of life for anyone that falls in this category/lower? We took a look at the situations faced by maybe the top 5% of the indian population but the sad state is its much much worse for the rest 95%. The sad truth is you get better returns and quality of life for the work you put in,abroad.
Very well said
well they also have thing called Ivey league but in India people from tier 3-4 city colleges are earing 20-30LPA
@blackcat-mp7kh thats totally untrue. I talked about ivy leagues through the example of Harvard which provides better returns despite being easier to get into. The avg package from IIT bombay is 21.82LPA acc to 2023 so idk on what basis you are claiming 20-30LPA through tier 3-4 city colleges while they may be earning such amounts later on in life earning that based on their degreee from those college is simply not happening except maybe 1 in 100,000 scenarios.
I seriously doubt this stat where people earning 25k falling into top 10%. It doesn't match with the groud reality of people having big buildings even in smaller towns. There might be lot of unaccounted money which people earn in unorganised sector.
@@Asleep_Beat its true,check out the economic times and the wire for this stat
Wonderful AEVY TV.. Best of the best videos i have seen in my life!!!
This is such a well edited and well researched video. Great job guys!
This is a very very very helpful video.Thanks a lot for making this video😮
This was a really good video and drawing comparisons from actual experience that you had there was really informative. Makes one questions lot of things. Keep it up guys, truly outstanding!.
Yip, I am 57. Born and raised in Africa. South African citizen. Lived 7 yrs in India from 15yrs of age to 22. In the 80's. Kerala and Karnataka. Travelled to over 30 countries - US many times. Lived briefly in the UK too. I visit India, at least twice a year
India was awesome in the '80s. Even better and very nice now. So affordable irdable too. Also improves each time I visit. South Africa - I am lucky to live in better places. Its really nice here. Crime is high but not as high as South side of Chicago etc. Very western in 'white' areas and African people are most humane - like family. So its a good suburban life, good roads 😂, restaurants, shopping malls, excellent housing, gyms, parks etc. Can help - good maids, gardenners etc too.
So yes, your views are spot on. Nicely done.
This is so true. I'm living in Canada and I can relate. combine it with poor weather, slow healthcare and more inflation.
Hey...that was one of the best videos I have watched on RUclips in last few days! Very well-researched, well-made, and with a message well-delivered!
Your editor is really good. Love to watch this kind of high quality videos
I also told my parents that I prefer to be here in our country rather than being in USA or Canada, because I know our country will become developed country
Muslims are making india poor dear
When?
Keep dreaming. It's not gonna happen.
@@SathyaswamyS you wait and watch
@@19abhishekbanerjee in some years
You guys are doing such a great job! Kudos 👏
As always, crazy awesome editing and storytelling guys..❤
Closed, Collective and Hypothetical cultures vs Open Individualistic and Independent cultures - that was the first thing which I evaluated when I felt like migrating to West at the age of 33. Dogmas Deities Hero Worships and Blind beliefs make predominant part of our culture whether we are interested in them or not. And compared to that part of India - any negatives of Western culture looked minuscule to me. Now I am 48 and raised two kids and still feeling strong and positive about living in a place which fits my mindset and thought process - and till today I never compared the salaries here and there. First 6 years here I lived pay check to pay check - still it is totally worth - not in the lines of money - there is some thing called sastisfaction in life - I had this same satisfaction when I lived in India while working in the Government set up for 4 years teaching in Govt Hospital for just 15,000 rupees, Point is migration is not for money for everyone. Youngsters should keep that in mind.
What's Hypothetical culture? Do you just like using big words without knowing what they mean?
How did you migrate? Masters?
@@harigovind7845 I moved to Tanzania in 2007 as a consultant radiologist - prepared for USMLE exams while working and making money - finished all exams by 2009 and 2010 I started my Radiology training in America - 2015 got a job at Emory University and 2016 Green Card as I am well published in academics and 2022 got my Citizenship and me and my brother got our parents also here. That is my story in a nutshell. Problems are everywhere, that is. a different topic.
Very well said. Though I want to live here to improve things on individual level but won't live in delusionary state of "Mera bharat mahan"
@@bibhachoubey545 , then you are on the right track - and I still do it - both financially donating money as well as teaching radiology in my mother institutions on a regular basis. Recently, I started a RUclips channel for education and science in Telugu, my mother tongue, too - to educate people on science - as I believe - that scientific temperament itself brings a humungous change in society. Nice meeting you here
Now I am 20 but when I am 7 like that I used to have an American dream just by watching tv shows and movies although I don't know what it was just. Years passed now stopped dreaming
Same here, for me it started by watching WWE 😅
US is still better than India. Start planning as early as possible.
@@rohan_3128 same...
Ur 20 you don't know anything about the world enough to make a judgement on how it is to be in the US, it's easy to watch videos and come to a conclusion
you're doing the same thing. you never changed.
The editing is super crisp!
Earn in America
Enjoy in India❤
Earn well in India. Visit US for a vacation. It is better
@@saboteur43 Exactly
@@saboteur43 no not, only top 1 percent can afford such a trip, it makes no sense to spend a yearly wage of an average Indian just on flight tickets.. make money there and enjoy in India and rest of the world, that's the best strategy.. make sure to retire in India.
Invest in assets in India, enjoy good returns and use part of the returns for such trips. Stay in India and retire in India
@@kumaragurusubramanian581 mind you all the expenses and housing cost also comes in $$
The editing on this video is too good. Your team has gotten so much better over time.
Such a wonderful informative video. It was literally an eye opener for me, my friends & also family members. I have many of my relatives staying in USA & Canada but they never speak up about their struggles so we never knew the reality. Thanks for spreading the awareness. Keep it up!!!
I really loved Dora also as she is so damn cute
Now you can happily stay in India &be proud of yourself but trust me if you get a chance to get over to US you will be 1st to come running lol
Things are so good in India that people take the dunky route &give up 50 -60 lakh to cross through Mexico or Canada &work here illegally &stay here for life time
@@indian-fc8md if you hate India, that's your choice, but don't spout toxic sh*t to others
And everyone is not following donkey route, not even 0.001% of youth
We believe in our country, we'll work for it ❤❤
Dude, don’t form opinions based on some random video covering just 2 cities, on top of that they are just a tourist, there is a big flaw here..
Unless someone lives in a country for 2 years, experience their systems, process, schooling, driving around, visiting a doc, and so on, only then you will get an overall picture..
98% of Indians who come to US, never return back to India. This data point simply debunks this video..
Lol this is not reality. This is misinformation to get some views from India.
THE EDIT STYLE HAS CHANGED AND IM ALL FOR IT!!!! This is so goooooddddddddd!!!!
I'm student living in lucknow and for my expense I'm earning 8.5k per month and I am not taking money from my parents for monthly expenses. It's an eye opening video let's make india 🇮🇳 great.
PLEASE DONT CLOSE UR EYE..KEEP IT OPEN
You do not understand what you are missing out on
yup!!!
This video is making me feel so good about living in India. And hats off to your team for what you are doing, your dreams definitely look way bigger than what yall are today. We will together make India great again.
Why do you need a video to validate your choices?
Love your country, no matter what ❤
@@subhamdhar8099😂😂 because of slavery habits
@@subhamdhar8099😂😂 because of slavery habits
Very informative video. Keep doing good work like this
Excellent and informative video. Kudos to the entire team for discussing all the right questions that too very quick.
That is one hell of editing right there!! It is way too good.
Just subscribed for the quality of camera , color correction/editing & sound quality
Bruh, the amount of editing and the level of this video is awesome, you're so underrated you deserve millions of subscribers....keep it up your awesome god level video😊
You guys really outdid yourself in this, epic
also thanks a lot for this video
What's funny is, going through all these. Some Americans has the audacity to talk bad for India.
It's because, we Indians gave them that audacity and moral high ground. We ourselves talk bad for India.
This is what happens when they teach you to be "proud of India", not "happy to be in India". Everyone has the right to criticize anyone they like
@@ghxst1607 Criticizing is okay, if one deserves to be appreciated then it goes the same for Criticizing. But by the OG comment, I was referring to the literal disrespect they do to India.
@@ghxst1607 And I didn't quite get your point with "proud of India". Is it bad? Or Could you elaborate?
U PROBABLY ONE OF AMBANI SON ,RIGHT ..SORRY I FORGOT EVEN THEY DONT STAY IN INDIA