Thanks to Eumi for her realistic perspective of living outside of Singapore. Having also lived in many countries, what SG has and provides for it citizens is pretty amazing. Always good to gain perspective to appreciate what you have. Yes no where in the world in easy to live, but safety, subsidised healthcare & housing, top-class MRT, efficiency and low tax. Things almost no where else I can think that compares in those aspects.
Better bored but safe and alive, than exciting life but dead prematurely in a random mass shooting. 😜I think perhaps boring has to do more with the individual than the environment. I am never bored wherever I am.
@hieveryone2003ofc other countries are more exciting, they have more crimes, more shootings, more riots, more conflicts for you to look forward to! Oh wait, dont u dare leave those countries when they're in trouble and fly to another safer country then come tell us abt "statistics" 😂😂😂
@@natico-w812 not sure what the question is. Big or small country it's all based on an individual's ability to live and survive in a country. You can compare individual safety, purchasing power, tax, mobility etc etc.
Wow, Jon still has his Singaporean accent after staying in the US for so long! Eumi's perspectives are very honest. The strong sense of Singaporeanship's present in both of them. Thank you Ghib (and missus) for the video!
Was a pleasure being interviewed by Ghib in this video and to share about some of the differences and my observations about life in the US. I happened to already be familiar with his content before meeting him so that was a huge plus! Thanks again man!! Lovely to see all the positive comments too! 🙌
I just wanted to let you know that most places I've worked here in the US always had at least 2-3 weeks of vacation to start and it will go up there to 4 to 5 weeks.
@@MoneywithEumi my coworkers husband I think doesn't get any either. They give him some extra money on this pto bucket he can draw from when he takes time. It is quite strange
I grew up in LA and lived in Singapore for 26 years. Your subjects painted an accurate picture of life in LA and California in general. I just returned from a trip to tour the Rocky Mountains, Bryce Canyon National Park, Zion National Park and Grand Canyon. I am sure we crossed paths on the hiking trails.
I’m fortunate to work in California and work takes me to Asia about three times a month. And every month I have a week to 10 days off during which I fly back to Singapore. It’s the best of both worlds.
My conclusion from this video from the 2 subjects are simple. They lived there because for better pay and career development but if any Singapore company offer them similar same opportunity and slightly better, I bet they will feel Singapore is 100x better and fly back immediately
Love this video! Jon and Eumi are both very inspiring individuals who carved their own life in US. Very interesting to hear their perspectives on life in SG vs USA. Indeed America is a huge country with endless possibilities (and land). I guess the point is wherever u are, if you are willing to work hard, u can make it!
Really such an eye-opener for Singaporeans making it well in USA. And its heartwarming to hear that both Jon and Eumi still wants to retire in Singapore eventually
I lived in Houston for 7 years old. The tax here is lower but nevertheless, it’s still high. Furthermore, you don’t really see any much government initiative in bettering the lives of people. My health insurance was US$650 per month per person! It was crazy! When I visited my GP, I still have to pay a co-pay of around US$80. That’s just consultation fees. Despite living in a middle upper income area, every other days, my Ring feed would informed me on shooting near my neighborhood, mainly at apartments. End of the day, I found Singapore is the best country to live after working overseas for more than 30 years.
My hubby is American from California. We spend 2-3 months a year in Pasadena, California and our preferred place to live and what I call home is still Singapore. ❤ Singaporeans have it so good - excellent housing (homeownership), medical care, education, transport, food! Right now in California, been here about 2 months and already missing home.
@@MoneywithEumi Oh nice - Pasadena is quite nice. We started playing table tennis on this visit so we drive to many surrounding cities, like Arcadia, Rosemead, San Gabriel, Alhambra looking for table tennis tables and kakis...these cities are so much more Chinese than Singapore, even the banks' names, street names are in Chinese! :-) And of course Chinese food! But still nothing like Singapore! 🙂
Thank you Ojisan for this great video... I've many foreign friends & they told me the same thing that Singaporeans are taking everything for granted...
And there are still singaporeans unappreciative living in Singapore.Complaining grumbling with the government.These peoples should work and live overseas ( first world countries)
Why compare? Solve the local issues on hand first People have grouses pertaining to these issues and we must not discount these people and the problems they encounter even though they may seem like peanuts to others
@@benjaminyh6252agreed and that's the way to improve, but she is just saying the truth also because the things we complain about are relatively trivial. Like how ppl here complain abt hospital bed availability, but they wont even go to a hospital in the US if they were Americans because even things like ambulance are sooo expensive not to mention the treatment itself. The homeless here are pulled into shelters before allocated to a rental. The homeless there live together under bridges for years.
Enlightening video about the comparisons between living in the US and Singapore, and what Singaporeans may think about when comparing costs of living, the laws, taxes, wages. Thanks for showcasing 2 of such individuals Ghib Ojisan! Hope you had a great time over in the USA.
I can relate to the experiences by fellow Sgreans in LA. Currently living in greater Seattle area, but I go back to Sg at least once a year during the non-touristy times. My primary reason to be here is lifestyle. Work, I am possibly better off back in Sg or maybe about the same. Medical, I head back to Sg. Even as a private patient, its cheaper.... and definitely better. When I am really old and unable to travel easily on my own, I probably will stay much longer in Sg. As I only left Sg just when I turned 40, I had worked up a full CPF retirement account and a HDB flat by that time. So life is all set in both places for me to retire anyway, but home is still Sg.
May i ask what work u do in Seattle? I just have this impression that will be hard to find job overseas after 40, so quite surprised u left at 40. I'm in my late 30s so trying expedite my planning to move overseas.
@@p6h14 I was a principal engineer in Sg and my American husband was retired. We moved to Seattle because we like access to water and sailing. There is no job for my specialty field in this state. So when I was low on funds, I worked at the gas station, and then amazon warehouse for a few months. Finally I had to work for my old company in NY for almost 2 years, and then switch to general engineering consulting for FB, ... quite low end for my skills :p . During COVID, things change, and now I am working 100% remote for another 1 of my old company. But I know that, even if I work at amazon warehouse, my single income will allow us to live quite well and still enjoy good life, because we have no mortgage in SG or US. My HDB and US properties are 100% paid, and we have rental income. That is the key. So any job would be fine, high paying job will be great :) . All the best for your planning.
Great video! but 6 days vacation is not normal in the US. Most companies imo across industries in the US usually averages 2 weeks vacation for full time employees.
@@paulinetan4502 Not true, 6 days is not normal. I got 10 vacation days (2 weeks) right out of college in an entry level corporate job. And according to Forbes "The average American worker gets 11 days of paid vacation per year. In the private sector, the average number of paid vacation days after five years of service increases to 15 days. After 10 years of service, it rises again to 17 days." Thats a day over 2 weeks
We know what life is like outside this small country. This vlog is another eye-opener. Can accept the trade-off, no issue. Like they say, the world is our oyster.
Don't underestimate the scariness of unsubsidized medical care in the US. Even if you are on tourist visa and have enough income to just pay for basic treatment when you're traveling, the other thing foreigners don't realize about US medical is that prices for prescription drugs are also almost totally unregulated. The clinic you visit could prescribe you an antibiotic that ends up costing hundreds of dollars at the pharmacy!
@@MoneywithEumi Our friend fell while visiting a model home here and was taken to the hospital. She spent about 5 hours there, did lots of scans, checks etc and the bill came up to US$12,000! Thankfully the developer paid the bill. Singaporeans should be more appreciative of what we have.
Most industry have mroe then 6 days. In the finance industry where I work, it is standard to start with 15 days or so and it goes up to 20 to 25 days. (4 to 5 weeks)
There are pros and cons. She is right. Tax is high and most people can save more when living in Singapore. There is capital gain tax too in US and it matters a lot if your income is from US equity. Working long enough in US will subject you to be taxed world wide income (meaning they can tax your Singapore bank interest and etc.) even though you are not Green Card holder.
I lived in US for 16 years (12 in California and 4 in Texas). I think the vacation days refer to public holidays, annual leave should be 14 days, not 7 days.
Healthcare in the US can be easily summarised by the amount you have to pay for an ambulance. That's why you sometimes hear cases where patients refuse treatment upon arrival of EMTs. The only reason to work in the US is the experience & connections from working in Silicon Valley, not the pay.
I worked with Singaporeans in the bay area (Santa Clara and Sunnyvale California) in the semiconductor industry they were great colleagues. 6 days vacation is not standard many industries have at two weeks or more. Singapore, ANA and EVA are my favorites airlines going to Asia
14:20 Singaporeans are 'direct'? I guess they can appreciate the directness of the Dutch people also! Come visit the Netherlands, Singaporeans! (And I like to visit Singapore.)
Having to live in New Zealand as a Singaporean for the past 26 years, it is true that Western working culture is definitely incomparable to Asian working culture. A true work life balance! Having say that, I paid a much higher taxes for now but when I get to my golden years, I will be taken care of in the form of subsidised or free (but waitlist) healthcare, pension and nursing care. Yes, I agreed infrastructure, transport, and health care system in Singapore are top notch, and indeed envious in the developed world, but what happened if you do not have sufficient CPF account to fulfil your retirement! Perhaps dependent on your grown-up children even-though they have their own life to be taken care of. Not too sure if this is fair to your children... although from an Asian culture perspective says yes it is! Sorry if my above comment may upset some Singaporean viewers but I do think grass is always greener down under.
That toilet looks fantastic. During a 12-hour flight, I would at least spend half an hour on it, shitting out all that delicious airline food (which really looks really delicious and perhaps even healthy).
You know when I visited L.A. for holiday with my wife like quite a number of years ago, as we walked down the street, everyone walking toward our direction was like smiling and greeted us like " Hey, how are you today? " Remember vividly there was one black man who removed his baseball cap, and said " Good evening sir". I was like "Wow" What on earth?! And I ain't no ang moh but a SG Chinese, didn't my friends say they were racist 😅 A few weeks ago when I was strolling in Changi Airport, a lady who looked like American walked toward and smiled the same way at me, nodding her head. I was telling myself I hadn't had that good feeling of being greeted amicably for a long long time.
I had different experience compare to you, was at LA couple of years ago, and me and my wife was scolded by a couple and ask us to f off from their country. Won't bother to go back to US now
@hieveryone2003 yeah you are right.. it just not because of just this case that i am not going to US.. there is a couple of reasons. I believe everybody have their fair share of personal reason not or to travel to another country.. E.g. some people like Korea or some don't like.. well just follow your preferences :) .
When my husband and I take walks at the Arboretum here in Arcadia, we make it a point to greet everyone we come across, and we don't always get greeted back in return. But we still continue to greet everyone because it makes us happy to do so :-)
Been in LA and Vancouver for 3 weeks last year. The cool weather makes a person extremely lazy, and the high taxes makes one put in 50% effort in whatever they do. That’s why Asia is rising.
Singapore is the most clean and safe country..but if you living in singapore you are stress..so crowded lot of people inside the shopping mall,beaches,as you can see mostly looks stress..you going out around singapore is the same place.unlike than the big country in asias,like taiwan,thailand,malaysia philippines is lot of places you can explore..
You just need to venture to St John Island....Lazarus Island.....both are connected to each other by a mini causeway........weekends are not limited to orchard rd......😂😂😂😂 People who kept complaining about this........bloody hell....I travel.alot......and this complain about SG...just tickles.
US has a strong hustle culture. Even though there’s a lot of lip service in politics, very few concrete civil improvements take place in time for when its needed. California is a very difficult place for businesses with its tight leash on regulations. With the homless tent cities and exodus of talent I don’t really see growth in the near future.
my experience in La is.. angmo skip paying bus ticket From La airport to union station and that stranger angmo sit beside me and act friendly talking about stuff😂 i m like can like that one meh.
World most expensive country to buy a car but taxi & ride hailing ride fare are way very low comparing to other major economies. Have anyone ever thought about it, driver daily overhead such as rental/lease, petrol, carpark and many more.... everything are getting expensive but fare are still pathetic. For driver, more daily trips plus longer working hours. How to have work life balance like that? Western tourist also wonder and ask driver how they earn with low ride fares in Singapore.
usa is 99% better than spore except for obscene health care costs.... health plus insurance....sg hdb cost of sgd 1 million can buy a 3 bed/2 bath house with garden n swimming pool...usd 76,000.00 4 a new Porshe..cheap fresh foods , vegetables, fruits n vegs...cheap kfc, mac, tacos, free speech, fantastic weather, free car parking, free swimming pool, tennis courts , free golf courses etc...
Feel safer but get robbed by all kinds of indirect taxes which goes into a black hole and citizen have made a choice not to ask for a full financial statement.
The US is so huge so you really can’t compare apple to apple. If you’re talking of an equivalent city lifestyle, selling your $1m HDB home might buy you a 500 sq ft studio where you pay upward of US$500 HOA (management fees) a month. Your prop tax would be about US$20,000. Somewhere near the boonies, you might be able to buy a house with your HDB sale proceeds, but can you live in the boonies after having lived in Singapore where everything is so convenient? You might still be able to buy something nearer the cities but you might go away for a holiday and come home to find a homeless person has moved into your home, or all your belongings emptied out! And that car? Do you know parking in NY city can be $50 for 2 hours?! Do you know traffic fines are usually at US$400? For speeding (10 miles above speed limit and they have helicopters to track you), not stopping or stopping beyond the STOP line. Having lived in the US and Singapore, it’s Singapore for me anytime.
u hv. not been 2 usa... thre is wat's called MEAN price...;now u hv.been educated....hdb in woodsland n holland road...still over sgd 1 million 4 99 yrs lease....u can own 3/4 vehicles at cheapest prices...free tennis courts, swimming pool, gyn, farmers' mkt etc...@@helenteoct
In Singapore they punish small crimes so that they don't develop into larger crimes. In the US we reward small crimes and develop our serious hardened criminals.🤣 The US would never be able to have a restrictive government. The political corruption would abuse the system. The people are not seen as "Customers" that need good service. We are just a wallet that the government keeps reaching into for funding their pet projects. I want to retire in Singapore, but the country doesn't want idle retired people. Now I know why your English is so Asian accent free.
So misleading. First California is not representative of America as it is the state with the HIGHEST taxes. Secondly, because of the many credits and tax deductions, nearly half of Americans pay 0% fedieral income tax. After credits, the average effective federal income tax rate for $50k-75k is 6.5%, $75-100k is 8.1%. Many states also have 0% state income taxes. The US is a huge country, lets not overly generalize based on ONE person's experience living in ONE city. I have lived and worked in BOTH Asia and US. I never buy things (clothes, appliances, etc,) in SG or HK because I can always find it cheaper in the US. Any Americans living near a Chinatown or other local markets can purchase groceries dirt cheap. Throw in the relatively cheaper price of cars and petro and it is way way cheaper to live in America than SG. I understand this is a pro-Singapore channel so ...
She is not wrong. Even cities like NYC have to pay 3 taxes, federal, state and city tax. Most people have to pay federal taxes. You are right that some state don't have state tax. But the tax are higher in other aspects like property tax.
Err, not sure who is misleading who. If you've watched the video, she clearly mentioned she is speaking from a perspective of living in CALIFORNIA, not USA as a WHOLE. If you decide to be ignorant, then please save yourself from writing such a stupid comment. 🙄 Oh and by the way, what you are saying is also from your '1 person's' POV. You alone are also NOT representative of the American population. Just quit trying to sound like a smart ass lah.
I lived in US for 10 years, racism is much more obvious on African American and Mexican; more cosmopolitan areas (LA, NYC, Chicago, etc) are much better. Americans are usually friendly to Chinese
Standard = civility, morality, logic, ... breeding, educated politicians (hahahahaha), informed policies (wah.hahahaha), logical implementations, less-hypocrisy ("ha~! I kill me" - alf), get-real (bwahahahahahahahahaa). OK, be serious, are they even humans.?
I’ve lived in both countries. US is way cheaper and much higher std of living. Of coz don’t compare NYC with Ang Mo Kio. Or Nassim Hill with North Dakota.
Standard = civility, morality, logic, ... breeding, educated politicians (hahahahaha), informed policies (wah.hahahaha), logical implementations, less-hypocrisy ("ha~! I kill me" - alf), get-real (bwahahahahahahahahaa). OK, be serious, are they even humans.?
This video can easily be a good documentary for CNA discussing Singaporean living in USA.
Thanks to Eumi for her realistic perspective of living outside of Singapore. Having also lived in many countries, what SG has and provides for it citizens is pretty amazing. Always good to gain perspective to appreciate what you have. Yes no where in the world in easy to live, but safety, subsidised healthcare & housing, top-class MRT, efficiency and low tax. Things almost no where else I can think that compares in those aspects.
You're welcome!
Better bored but safe and alive, than exciting life but dead prematurely in a random mass shooting. 😜I think perhaps boring has to do more with the individual than the environment. I am never bored wherever I am.
@hieveryone2003ofc other countries are more exciting, they have more crimes, more shootings, more riots, more conflicts for you to look forward to! Oh wait, dont u dare leave those countries when they're in trouble and fly to another safer country then come tell us abt "statistics" 😂😂😂
why you compare small tiny island with a mega country? how are they side by side?
@@natico-w812 not sure what the question is. Big or small country it's all based on an individual's ability to live and survive in a country. You can compare individual safety, purchasing power, tax, mobility etc etc.
Wow, Jon still has his Singaporean accent after staying in the US for so long! Eumi's perspectives are very honest. The strong sense of Singaporeanship's present in both of them. Thank you Ghib (and missus) for the video!
Was a pleasure being interviewed by Ghib in this video and to share about some of the differences and my observations about life in the US.
I happened to already be familiar with his content before meeting him so that was a huge plus!
Thanks again man!! Lovely to see all the positive comments too! 🙌
Thanks Jon!! Keep in touch, looking forward to seeing you soon again
I love Singapore. This is a place i call it ❤ Home ❤
When u r outside, u’ll appreciate Singapore more. ❤🇸🇬😘
Thank you for having me Ghib!I had a great time talking with you and sharing our different perspectives!
New follower now 😊
I just wanted to let you know that most places I've worked here in the US always had at least 2-3 weeks of vacation to start and it will go up there to 4 to 5 weeks.
@@dhong55 you’re one of the lucky ones. I have friends who don’t have any at all 😂
@@MoneywithEumi my coworkers husband I think doesn't get any either. They give him some extra money on this pto bucket he can draw from when he takes time. It is quite strange
@@dhong55 that is strange. Yeah trying to petition for more vacation days 😂
I grew up in LA and lived in Singapore for 26 years. Your subjects painted an accurate picture of life in LA and California in general. I just returned from a trip to tour the Rocky Mountains, Bryce Canyon National Park, Zion National Park and Grand Canyon. I am sure we crossed paths on the hiking trails.
I’m fortunate to work in California and work takes me to Asia about three times a month. And every month I have a week to 10 days off during which I fly back to Singapore. It’s the best of both worlds.
My conclusion from this video from the 2 subjects are simple. They lived there because for better pay and career development but if any Singapore company offer them similar same opportunity and slightly better, I bet they will feel Singapore is 100x better and fly back immediately
You're right!
Love this video! Jon and Eumi are both very inspiring individuals who carved their own life in US. Very interesting to hear their perspectives on life in SG vs USA. Indeed America is a huge country with endless possibilities (and land). I guess the point is wherever u are, if you are willing to work hard, u can make it!
well said
Government plays a huge part also. You won't make it if you work hard in North Korea
Really such an eye-opener for Singaporeans making it well in USA. And its heartwarming to hear that both Jon and Eumi still wants to retire in Singapore eventually
💯
I lived in Houston for 7 years old. The tax here is lower but nevertheless, it’s still high. Furthermore, you don’t really see any much government initiative in bettering the lives of people.
My health insurance was US$650 per month per person! It was crazy! When I visited my GP, I still have to pay a co-pay of around US$80. That’s just consultation fees.
Despite living in a middle upper income area, every other days, my Ring feed would informed me on shooting near my neighborhood, mainly at apartments.
End of the day, I found Singapore is the best country to live after working overseas for more than 30 years.
May i ask which countries who have worked and which one u feel was ur fave?
Seriously! US$650 a month for health insurance and you still have to co-pay US$80 to see a GP!
My god, Eumi offered a very refreshing perspective. I enjoyed this ep so much
Glad you enjoyed it!
You're welcome! :)
I am now in Taipei watching this video, and of course I took EVA Air. Going back to my Singapore on Sunday. ❤
I really like your videos and you have a nice style of interviewing people!
My hubby is American from California. We spend 2-3 months a year in Pasadena, California and our preferred place to live and what I call home is still Singapore. ❤ Singaporeans have it so good - excellent housing (homeownership), medical care, education, transport, food!
Right now in California, been here about 2 months and already missing home.
I lived in Pasadena for 5 years!
@@MoneywithEumi Oh nice - Pasadena is quite nice. We started playing table tennis on this visit so we drive to many surrounding cities, like Arcadia, Rosemead, San Gabriel, Alhambra looking for table tennis tables and kakis...these cities are so much more Chinese than Singapore, even the banks' names, street names are in Chinese! :-) And of course Chinese food! But still nothing like Singapore! 🙂
Always have admired JonOng and his solid persistence into music🎉
Thank you Ojisan for this great video... I've many foreign friends & they told me the same thing that Singaporeans are taking everything for granted...
And there are still singaporeans unappreciative living in Singapore.Complaining grumbling with the government.These peoples should work and live overseas ( first world countries)
Why compare? Solve the local issues on hand first
People have grouses pertaining to these issues and we must not discount these people and the problems they encounter even though they may seem like peanuts to others
@benjaminyh6252 No country is perfect not even Singapore but government tries giving their best service to singaporeans.
@@benjaminyh6252agreed and that's the way to improve, but she is just saying the truth also because the things we complain about are relatively trivial. Like how ppl here complain abt hospital bed availability, but they wont even go to a hospital in the US if they were Americans because even things like ambulance are sooo expensive not to mention the treatment itself. The homeless here are pulled into shelters before allocated to a rental. The homeless there live together under bridges for years.
Eumi adapts quickly to all situations, speaks intelligently, and is an independent woman.
Enlightening video about the comparisons between living in the US and Singapore, and what Singaporeans may think about when comparing costs of living, the laws, taxes, wages.
Thanks for showcasing 2 of such individuals Ghib Ojisan! Hope you had a great time over in the USA.
Glad you enjoyed! We absolutely enjoyed our time and looking forward to visit again very soon
why you compare small tiny island with a mega country? how are they side by side?
I can relate to the experiences by fellow Sgreans in LA. Currently living in greater Seattle area, but I go back to Sg at least once a year during the non-touristy times. My primary reason to be here is lifestyle. Work, I am possibly better off back in Sg or maybe about the same. Medical, I head back to Sg. Even as a private patient, its cheaper.... and definitely better.
When I am really old and unable to travel easily on my own, I probably will stay much longer in Sg. As I only left Sg just when I turned 40, I had worked up a full CPF retirement account and a HDB flat by that time. So life is all set in both places for me to retire anyway, but home is still Sg.
May i ask what work u do in Seattle? I just have this impression that will be hard to find job overseas after 40, so quite surprised u left at 40. I'm in my late 30s so trying expedite my planning to move overseas.
@@p6h14 I was a principal engineer in Sg and my American husband was retired. We moved to Seattle because we like access to water and sailing. There is no job for my specialty field in this state. So when I was low on funds, I worked at the gas station, and then amazon warehouse for a few months. Finally I had to work for my old company in NY for almost 2 years, and then switch to general engineering consulting for FB, ... quite low end for my skills :p . During COVID, things change, and now I am working 100% remote for another 1 of my old company.
But I know that, even if I work at amazon warehouse, my single income will allow us to live quite well and still enjoy good life, because we have no mortgage in SG or US. My HDB and US properties are 100% paid, and we have rental income. That is the key. So any job would be fine, high paying job will be great :) .
All the best for your planning.
@@roboticsforfun5000 thanks for sharing ur story with me, appreciate it! I hope u enjoy ur time living in Seattle to the fullest!
Great video! but 6 days vacation is not normal in the US. Most companies imo across industries in the US usually averages 2 weeks vacation for full time employees.
Actually it is normal that US companies only offer 6 days annual leave.
@@paulinetan4502 Not true, 6 days is not normal. I got 10 vacation days (2 weeks) right out of college in an entry level corporate job. And according to Forbes "The average American worker gets 11 days of paid vacation per year. In the private sector, the average number of paid vacation days after five years of service increases to 15 days. After 10 years of service, it rises again to 17 days."
Thats a day over 2 weeks
@@paulinetan4502 I think not among the tech companies.... and I think not for the professional level employees.
Depends on your company. I have friends who work in smaller companies with no vacation days for managerial roles.
@@MoneywithEumiyea but that’s not the norm and definitely way below average number of vacation days, which was my point.
We know what life is like outside this small country. This vlog is another eye-opener. Can accept the trade-off, no issue. Like they say, the world is our oyster.
Don't underestimate the scariness of unsubsidized medical care in the US. Even if you are on tourist visa and have enough income to just pay for basic treatment when you're traveling, the other thing foreigners don't realize about US medical is that prices for prescription drugs are also almost totally unregulated. The clinic you visit could prescribe you an antibiotic that ends up costing hundreds of dollars at the pharmacy!
And never call an ambulance in the U.S. even if you're insured.
@@MoneywithEumi Our friend fell while visiting a model home here and was taken to the hospital. She spent about 5 hours there, did lots of scans, checks etc and the bill came up to US$12,000! Thankfully the developer paid the bill. Singaporeans should be more appreciative of what we have.
@@helenteoct agreed. I did a 1 hour surgery and the bill was $48k before insurance. Thankfully I had insurance... lol.
@@MoneywithEumiwent thru 2 MRIs, 1 surgery and 1 biopsy in SG. All covered by either gov, medisave or insurance. Really take things for granted 😢
Most industry have mroe then 6 days. In the finance industry where I work, it is standard to start with 15 days or so and it goes up to 20 to 25 days. (4 to 5 weeks)
There are pros and cons. She is right. Tax is high and most people can save more when living in Singapore. There is capital gain tax too in US and it matters a lot if your income is from US equity. Working long enough in US will subject you to be taxed world wide income (meaning they can tax your Singapore bank interest and etc.) even though you are not Green Card holder.
Oh yes, forgot to mention that part! Not favorable to become a U.S. citizen lol.
Ah love your Vlog so nice and relaxing. Thank You for your video
😌👍🌷💙🤍
My pleasure 😊
I lived in US for 16 years (12 in California and 4 in Texas). I think the vacation days refer to public holidays, annual leave should be 14 days, not 7 days.
Healthcare in the US can be easily summarised by the amount you have to pay for an ambulance. That's why you sometimes hear cases where patients refuse treatment upon arrival of EMTs. The only reason to work in the US is the experience & connections from working in Silicon Valley, not the pay.
This is my favourite video from you❤ Thanks so much for sharing. Information from eumi is so insightful 😊
Great video ghib
I was born in Southern California, and all my friends still live here. We all bought homes or condominiums here.
Took few EVA flights to Vancouver, transits at Taoyuan International Airport. There was one, ROC Security Bureau Chief was onboard. 😁
I worked with Singaporeans in the bay area (Santa Clara and Sunnyvale California) in the semiconductor industry they were great colleagues. 6 days vacation is not standard many industries have at two weeks or more. Singapore, ANA and EVA are my favorites airlines going to Asia
I live abroad too..but I know I will return home to Singapore too
How do you meet up these Singaporeans in the USA ?
Alright, you convinced me. I'm switching from SIA to EVA.
My aunt's biggest regret was to convert to US citizenship. Now she wants to return to stay long term also cannot.
Singapore is very stressful, crowded everywhere and everybody is just stressing and rushing. It's hell for me.
14:20 Singaporeans are 'direct'? I guess they can appreciate the directness of the Dutch people also! Come visit the Netherlands, Singaporeans! (And I like to visit Singapore.)
Having to live in New Zealand as a Singaporean for the past 26 years, it is true that Western working culture is definitely incomparable to Asian working culture. A true work life balance! Having say that, I paid a much higher taxes for now but when I get to my golden years, I will be taken care of in the form of subsidised or free (but waitlist) healthcare, pension and nursing care. Yes, I agreed infrastructure, transport, and health care system in Singapore are top notch, and indeed envious in the developed world, but what happened if you do not have sufficient CPF account to fulfil your retirement! Perhaps dependent on your grown-up children even-though they have their own life to be taken care of. Not too sure if this is fair to your children... although from an Asian culture perspective says yes it is! Sorry if my above comment may upset some Singaporean viewers but I do think grass is always greener down under.
the grass is greener.. where you choose to water it.
That toilet looks fantastic. During a 12-hour flight, I would at least spend half an hour on it, shitting out all that delicious airline food (which really looks really delicious and perhaps even healthy).
Bro you need to upgrade your camera to the new dji pocket 3
個人的に住むとなれば治安が良くて清潔で税金が安く公共交通機関が充実してるシンガポールの方を間違い無く選ぶし色んな意味でシンガポールとは全く真逆の米国を選ぶ事はまずあり得へんな。
シンガポールは確かに最高ですが、カリフォルニアもカリフォルニアで魅力たくさんでした😁
@@GhibOjisan But deadly.
You know when I visited L.A. for holiday with my wife like quite a number of years ago, as we walked down the street, everyone walking toward our direction was like smiling and greeted us like " Hey, how are you today? " Remember vividly there was one black man who removed his baseball cap, and said " Good evening sir". I was like "Wow" What on earth?! And I ain't no ang moh but a SG Chinese, didn't my friends say they were racist 😅
A few weeks ago when I was strolling in Changi Airport, a lady who looked like American walked toward and smiled the same way at me, nodding her head. I was telling myself I hadn't had that good feeling of being greeted amicably for a long long time.
Yes it’s so normal to greet strangers and I loved it too😁
I had different experience compare to you, was at LA couple of years ago, and me and my wife was scolded by a couple and ask us to f off from their country. Won't bother to go back to US now
@hieveryone2003 yeah you are right.. it just not because of just this case that i am not going to US.. there is a couple of reasons. I believe everybody have their fair share of personal reason not or to travel to another country.. E.g. some people like Korea or some don't like.. well just follow your preferences :) .
When my husband and I take walks at the Arboretum here in Arcadia, we make it a point to greet everyone we come across, and we don't always get greeted back in return. But we still continue to greet everyone because it makes us happy to do so :-)
@@GhibOjisan It's also normal to be killed at any moment anywhere even in your own home and also by their police😲
No, not 6 days holidays a year in the US. That’s illegal. Two weeks vacation per year is an average in the US.
Been in LA and Vancouver for 3 weeks last year. The cool weather makes a person extremely lazy, and the high taxes makes one put in 50% effort in whatever they do. That’s why Asia is rising.
Now I know why Australia has the highest Singaporean population in the world after Malaysia after hearing this lady’s story
All roads lead to home. One can almost never find somewhere better than Singapore.
if crime rate is high, possible to live near a police station?
Singapore is the most clean and safe country..but if you living in singapore you are stress..so crowded lot of people inside the shopping mall,beaches,as you can see mostly looks stress..you going out around singapore is the same place.unlike than the big country in asias,like taiwan,thailand,malaysia philippines is lot of places you can explore..
Yes it’s difficult to find serenity in Singapore but I guess nothing much can be done as it’s such a small country. Maybe slowly reclaim more land?😆
You just need to venture to St John Island....Lazarus Island.....both are connected to each other by a mini causeway........weekends are not limited to orchard rd......😂😂😂😂
People who kept complaining about this........bloody hell....I travel.alot......and this complain about SG...just tickles.
Eumi is my financial expert on youtube , she is my defacto go to on anything relate to finance
Visit Taiwan! You got a lot of Taiwanese audiences.❤
Haha I am looking forward to visit next year😁
US has a strong hustle culture. Even though there’s a lot of lip service in politics, very few concrete civil improvements take place in time for when its needed. California is a very difficult place for businesses with its tight leash on regulations. With the homless tent cities and exodus of talent I don’t really see growth in the near future.
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I haven't worked in a company that text me after i leave the office in Singapore. Anyone can share? Local company?
Lucky you. I worked in public and private. Def both got kinda before. Public less.
If you truly want to experience life, definitely move abroad away from Singapore.
my experience in La is.. angmo skip paying bus ticket From La airport to union station and that stranger angmo sit beside me and act friendly talking about stuff😂 i m like can like that one meh.
I never realised that SG has low taxes... :O
World most expensive country to buy a car but taxi & ride hailing ride fare are way very low comparing to other major economies. Have anyone ever thought about it, driver daily overhead such as rental/lease, petrol, carpark and many more.... everything are getting expensive but fare are still pathetic.
For driver, more daily trips plus longer working hours. How to have work life balance like that?
Western tourist also wonder and ask driver how they earn with low ride fares in Singapore.
usa is 99% better than spore except for obscene health care costs.... health plus insurance....sg hdb cost of sgd 1 million can buy a 3 bed/2 bath house with garden n swimming pool...usd 76,000.00 4 a new Porshe..cheap fresh foods , vegetables, fruits n vegs...cheap kfc, mac, tacos, free speech, fantastic weather, free car parking, free swimming pool, tennis courts , free golf courses etc...
but I feel safer living in S'pore
Feel safer but get robbed by all kinds of indirect taxes which goes into a black hole and citizen have made a choice not to ask for a full financial statement.
I love TACOS!
The US is so huge so you really can’t compare apple to apple. If you’re talking of an equivalent city lifestyle, selling your $1m HDB home might buy you a 500 sq ft studio where you pay upward of US$500 HOA (management fees) a month. Your prop tax would be about US$20,000. Somewhere near the boonies, you might be able to buy a house with your HDB sale proceeds, but can you live in the boonies after having lived in Singapore where everything is so convenient? You might still be able to buy something nearer the cities but you might go away for a holiday and come home to find a homeless person has moved into your home, or all your belongings emptied out!
And that car? Do you know parking in NY city can be $50 for 2 hours?! Do you know traffic fines are usually at US$400? For speeding (10 miles above speed limit and they have helicopters to track you), not stopping or stopping beyond the STOP line.
Having lived in the US and Singapore, it’s Singapore for me anytime.
u hv. not been 2 usa... thre is wat's called MEAN price...;now u hv.been educated....hdb in woodsland n holland road...still over sgd 1 million 4 99 yrs lease....u can own 3/4 vehicles at cheapest prices...free tennis courts, swimming pool, gyn, farmers' mkt etc...@@helenteoct
In Singapore they punish small crimes so that they don't develop into larger crimes. In the US we reward small crimes and develop our serious hardened criminals.🤣 The US would never be able to have a restrictive government. The political corruption would abuse the system. The people are not seen as "Customers" that need good service. We are just a wallet that the government keeps reaching into for funding their pet projects.
I want to retire in Singapore, but the country doesn't want idle retired people. Now I know why your English is so Asian accent free.
Yea, wait till you have to pay for rent in singapore. You're comparing one with rent and one without.
LA is diff than other cities.
5 star flight for a 2 star lifestyle.😂 welcome to America 😅
So misleading. First California is not representative of America as it is the state with the HIGHEST taxes. Secondly, because of the many credits and tax deductions, nearly half of Americans pay 0% fedieral income tax. After credits, the average effective federal income tax rate for $50k-75k is 6.5%, $75-100k is 8.1%. Many states also have 0% state income taxes. The US is a huge country, lets not overly generalize based on ONE person's experience living in ONE city. I have lived and worked in BOTH Asia and US. I never buy things (clothes, appliances, etc,) in SG or HK because I can always find it cheaper in the US. Any Americans living near a Chinatown or other local markets can purchase groceries dirt cheap. Throw in the relatively cheaper price of cars and petro and it is way way cheaper to live in America than SG. I understand this is a pro-Singapore channel so ...
She is not wrong. Even cities like NYC have to pay 3 taxes, federal, state and city tax. Most people have to pay federal taxes. You are right that some state don't have state tax. But the tax are higher in other aspects like property tax.
But US doesn't have hidden taxes like Stamp Duties and COE@@bryanjp79
Err, not sure who is misleading who. If you've watched the video, she clearly mentioned she is speaking from a perspective of living in CALIFORNIA, not USA as a WHOLE. If you decide to be ignorant, then please save yourself from writing such a stupid comment. 🙄 Oh and by the way, what you are saying is also from your '1 person's' POV. You alone are also NOT representative of the American population. Just quit trying to sound like a smart ass lah.
@hieveryone2003 Err, my reply was to OP, not you obviously.
"Stupid" "ignorant" "smart ass" ? Why so offended? You can't communicate without name-calling?@@thewalk7816
I lived in US for 10 years, racism is much more obvious on African American and Mexican; more cosmopolitan areas (LA, NYC, Chicago, etc) are much better. Americans are usually friendly to Chinese
Correct, $10k isnt high. Even if there is zero tax. Hell its mediocre even in Singapore. Come on!
🤣
No big deal. Is her own undertaking.
jon stands like an npc hahaa
Standard
= civility, morality, logic, ... breeding, educated politicians (hahahahaha), informed policies (wah.hahahaha), logical implementations, less-hypocrisy ("ha~! I kill me" - alf), get-real (bwahahahahahahahahaa).
OK, be serious, are they even humans.?
That is why I prefer western country not singapore .. singapore too many people and problem
I’ve lived in both countries. US is way cheaper and much higher std of living. Of coz don’t compare NYC with Ang Mo Kio. Or Nassim Hill with North Dakota.
Standard
= civility, morality, logic, ... breeding, educated politicians (hahahahaha), informed policies (wah.hahahaha), logical implementations, less-hypocrisy ("ha~! I kill me" - alf), get-real (bwahahahahahahahahaa).
OK, be serious, are they even humans.?