If you can find a remote job paying in dollars and live in Brazil you will have the best of the two worlds. Remember to choose a safe city when thinking about living in Brazil.
The information is useful, thank you for the comparison. I am thinking about living in Brazil. Can you mention the name of the place where you live? It has a high level of safety and a low cost of living. Please, can you recommend other places to live in Brazil that have the same advantages in terms of price and safety? Thank you very much and I wish you happy days in Brazil
@@nordicinvestor When I leave a tip it is 1 dollar even if it is just coffee. They actually make more money than I do and I also have bills to pay just like they do. That tip is just for me I put it under the coffee cup because the coffee cup is what I judge by.
Whether you're craving a traditional Brazilian coffee in a disposable cup for just 0.15 to 0.20 cents, an espresso for 0.90 cents, or a cappuccino for $2, Brazilian coffee prices are surprisingly affordable. Interestingly, machine-made coffees tend to be more expensive.
I'm in Northern Michigan near Traverse City. It does feel safe here as opposed to other cities in the U.S. I grew up in Lansing and felt safe there as well, but it has been becoming more dangerous over the years. I came to Rio and Sao Paulo last year. I enjoyed both cities, but my Uber driver warned me that Sao Paulo was dangerous when he dropped me off at the hotel. Traverse city is very expensive compared to the average wage in the area. The saying goes, "a view of the bay is worth half the pay"
Sou brasileira e não como arroz feijao todos os dias, é folclore quem pensa que brasileiros so comem arroz feijão tidos os dias. Nos restaurantes tem em seu cardapio todos os dias porem não em nosso dia a dia caseiro.
Surprisingly, the U.S. has three times the homeless population of Brazil, despite having only 50% more people (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sovereign_states_by_homeless_population)
If you can find a remote job paying in dollars and live in Brazil you will have the best of the two worlds. Remember to choose a safe city when thinking about living in Brazil.
Good advice!
Brazil is like an alternate universe. So much of what is wonderful in Brazil is terrible in the US and vice versa.
Very true!
I'm from London UK .. Been living in Brazil SC since 2008 and I absolutely love rice and beans!! Have to be black beans of course 🤤
I like black beans as well but I cannot eat it as often as most Brazilians do😂
Feijão carioquinha por favor. Marrom
@@ArturVarejao muito bom também! 😋
Excellent video 🙏🏾
Thank you 🙌
The information is useful, thank you for the comparison. I am thinking about living in Brazil. Can you mention the name of the place where you live? It has a high level of safety and a low cost of living. Please, can you recommend other places to live in Brazil that have the same advantages in terms of price and safety? Thank you very much and I wish you happy days in Brazil
I did some videos recently about some good cities to live, like Brusque and Jaragua do sul
thank you so much i saw that but these places is safe but it is not little price in living
@@patricksweeney5308 thank you so much , wish a blessing days
Bra video, til tross for problemer med lyden. Vet ikke hvorfor, men dine tidligere videoer har bedre audio.
I think I know what I did wrong with the audio, hopefully I can fix it for next time.
Nice video! Non-biased and backed-by-data opinions are on point!
Thank you!
It is cheaper to go to a sit down in the States too but I'm not a big tipper either
For me the tipping culture in the US was a shock!
@@nordicinvestor When I leave a tip it is 1 dollar even if it is just coffee. They actually make more money than I do and I also have bills to pay just like they do. That tip is just for me I put it under the coffee cup because the coffee cup is what I judge by.
What area you live in Brazil?
Santa Catarina
@nordicinvestor2 thank you l love what l see there 🫡
Hi there! I pretty sure it’s Blumenau, in Santa Catarina ( State of…)
How much is a cup of coffee there?
Whether you're craving a traditional Brazilian coffee in a disposable cup for just 0.15 to 0.20 cents, an espresso for 0.90 cents, or a cappuccino for $2, Brazilian coffee prices are surprisingly affordable. Interestingly, machine-made coffees tend to be more expensive.
@@mareminho Just Coffee and Thank you
Mareminho explained it very well
Very good explanation!
I'm in Northern Michigan near Traverse City. It does feel safe here as opposed to other cities in the U.S. I grew up in Lansing and felt safe there as well, but it has been becoming more dangerous over the years.
I came to Rio and Sao Paulo last year. I enjoyed both cities, but my Uber driver warned me that Sao Paulo was dangerous when he dropped me off at the hotel.
Traverse city is very expensive compared to the average wage in the area. The saying goes, "a view of the bay is worth half the pay"
Obesity
Good point!
Sou brasileira e não como arroz feijao todos os dias, é folclore quem pensa que brasileiros so comem arroz feijão tidos os dias.
Nos restaurantes tem em seu cardapio todos os dias porem não em nosso dia a dia caseiro.
Surprisingly, the U.S. has three times the homeless population of Brazil, despite having only 50% more people (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sovereign_states_by_homeless_population)