Is Life Better in the USA or Canada? (An Honest Review)

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  • Опубликовано: 31 янв 2025

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  • @AmeerCorro
    @AmeerCorro  2 месяца назад +128

    I understand some viewers expected a definitive conclusion given the video’s title, and that’s a fair point. If you came to this video expecting a clear verdict, I can see how the lack of one might feel frustrating. I’ll keep that in mind for future videos.
    This video was never meant to hand out a neat, one-size-fits-all answer to a nuanced and deeply personal question.
    If I had said, ‘Canada is better’ or ‘the USA is better,’ I’d be oversimplifying something that depends entirely on who you are, what you value, and what your life circumstances look like. That’s why I laid out all the factors-income, cost of living, healthcare, career opportunities, social benefits, and livability-and gave you the tools to weigh them against your own priorities.
    Let’s be real-if I claimed that one country is definitively ‘better,’ a lot of people would have (rightfully) called me out for ignoring the nuanced and subjective nature of the topic.
    Instead, I made the conscious choice to present an even-handed, data-driven analysis while also sharing my own experiences and the experiences of my guests. My goal was to help you reflect on what’s “better” for you based on what you’re optimizing for.
    As for my honest take, I did share it. I said Canada feels safer and offers a better social safety net, while the USA provides unparalleled opportunities for career advancement, which align with my goals right now. That is my honest answer, and that’s why I’m here in the US.
    At the end of the day, my goal is to encourage critical thinking, deep conversation, and reflection, not to hand out easy answers. I respect that you might feel differently.
    Thanks for watching, and I appreciate everyone who engages thoughtfully in this conversation.

    • @pranshukrishna5105
      @pranshukrishna5105 2 месяца назад +8

      Isn't Canada overall better in terms of healthcare and social safety

    • @pranshukrishna5105
      @pranshukrishna5105 2 месяца назад +2

      where did you get 16:12 data

    • @Chinatownwanderer
      @Chinatownwanderer 2 месяца назад +3

      ​@@pranshukrishna5105not after 2019

    • @jillthompson6110
      @jillthompson6110 2 месяца назад +9

      Canada is still better. Sorry, it's the truth.

    • @billyfink1234
      @billyfink1234 2 месяца назад +3

      ​@@jillthompson6110 Did you read what he wrote?

  • @AnnieDang
    @AnnieDang 2 месяца назад +23

    Such a well thought out video! It really is up to each of us to decide what is best for us because there is no “one size fits all” answer. Thanks for sharing your perspective and all of this information!

  • @md.fahadhossain8021
    @md.fahadhossain8021 2 месяца назад +692

    Why did you not talk about the house prices in Canada? This is one of the biggest issues for millions of people.

    • @devinmes1868
      @devinmes1868 2 месяца назад +53

      He talked about rent prices at the very beginning of the video. Sure, these aren't housing prices but you can make a pretty educated guess based on the results of the cost of living section.

    • @septeracore
      @septeracore 2 месяца назад +42

      @@boredguy5805 Grass is always greener on the other side. My sister lives in US, I live in Canada - we both complain about cost of living.

    • @melbourneplanespotter3631
      @melbourneplanespotter3631 2 месяца назад +19

      @@boredguy5805 Housing-to-income is worse in major Canadian cities where the jobs actually are, and while it's also true for American cities like in California and New York, you still have 48 other states to choose from and can live an affordable life in Dallas, Chicago, Houston, Philly, Charlotte, etc., all of which have good job prospects.

    • @allansteffensen5646
      @allansteffensen5646 2 месяца назад +33

      ​@@boredguy5805 Winnipeg isn't in Alberta lol

    • @ChristmasBall9987
      @ChristmasBall9987 2 месяца назад +3

      Canada has adjustable rates mortgages if not grandfathered in

  • @chenwang5341
    @chenwang5341 2 месяца назад +130

    Also the curious case of Vancouver - simple answer is that those who can afford living in Vancouver did not make their money in Vancouver. They earned them money elsewhere and park/spend their money there

    • @MsMc.whatnow
      @MsMc.whatnow 2 месяца назад +20

      Or we started a long time ago

    • @joshuamethven
      @joshuamethven 2 месяца назад +3

      It's more of a - people made money before shit hit the fan and those people are still here getting by. Immigration and lack of housing have just made this once great place to live a financial housing crisis money pit with over priced groceries.
      But to get back to what your were saying.. yes we made our money here. (except for the ones who bought in here anyways..)

    • @person51035
      @person51035 2 месяца назад

      For younger people, those enjoying life in Vancouver nowadays are the ones getting hundreds of thousands (or even millions) from their parents.
      Google this: "jackpot generation" and read the Maclean's article. It talks about how there's $1 trillion of inheritance moving from Canadian boomers to millennials, just from 2024 - 2026.

    • @Tyler_094
      @Tyler_094 2 месяца назад +2

      @@joshuamethvendepends on the generation. If you’re under 25 right now you certainly didn’t make much money in the last decade of working years under Trudeau.

    • @rickmcgill722
      @rickmcgill722 2 месяца назад

      @@Tyler_094Was Trudeau paying you?

  • @jeffreygevant3126
    @jeffreygevant3126 2 месяца назад +278

    I'm an RN. I will never get a $85 US plus per hour in Vancouver. I rent a room in Seattle and bring my US$ income and still live in Vancouver. I work blocks and get a long days off in Seattle and drive back to Vancouver. My Healthcare benefits are paid off by my employer in Seattle and still have full free healthcare benefits in Vancouver. In life you have to reap the benefits on both worlds. Life is good!

    • @Night-Shade.
      @Night-Shade. 2 месяца назад +32

      You're Hannah Montanah
      Because you're getting the best of both worlds...... I mean countries

    • @MayraDiaz-cf9hc
      @MayraDiaz-cf9hc 2 месяца назад +11

      How are you getting tax?

    • @fluidice1656
      @fluidice1656 2 месяца назад +16

      Wow, talking about being well-positioned. Congrats!

    • @julien8097
      @julien8097 2 месяца назад +1

      hey may i ask, in what industry do you work ? (genuinely interested)

    • @tedtalksrock
      @tedtalksrock 2 месяца назад

      @@julien8097healthcare. She’s a nurse.

  • @ElenaRamirezRamirez-n7h
    @ElenaRamirezRamirez-n7h Месяц назад +198

    Successful people don't become that way overnight .most people you see as a glance-wealth, a great career, purpose-is the result of hard work and hustle over time. I pray that anyone who reads this will be successful in life..

    • @FilippaPoulsen-p2s
      @FilippaPoulsen-p2s Месяц назад +1

      my portfolio has been going down the drain while I try trading,I just don't know what I do wrong..

    • @KiveläMatti
      @KiveläMatti Месяц назад

      Mr Pierre was my hope during the 'bear summer' last year. I did so many mistakes but also learned so much from it, and of course from Pierre.

    • @TeemuSiniranta
      @TeemuSiniranta Месяц назад

      He is my family's personal broker and also a personal broker in many families In United States, he's a licensed broker and a FINRA AGENT in United states

    • @FemkeCools-b9q
      @FemkeCools-b9q Месяц назад

      He communicates on any of this >< that's his
      Wasapp

    • @FemkeCools-b9q
      @FemkeCools-b9q Месяц назад

      +447

  • @michinwaygook3684
    @michinwaygook3684 2 месяца назад +168

    As a Canadian who has had a lot of experience with both countries - my grandfather was born in the U.S., my son is a U.S. citizen, I had five years of U.S. schooling, I lived in the U.S., my ex-wife is American, I have traveled extensively in the U.S., my childhood best friends were American - I can say what country is the best is very individual.
    If I wasn't a single parent raising a special needs son I would probably live in the U.S. The services my special needs son receives in Canada could not be matched in even the most progressive east coast states. In Canada he is covered for dental, ambulance, optometrist, and special needs aids. He receives a benefit income, has door to door transportation, is in a full time program and is even enrolled in a special go'vt savings / investment plan. As a child his teacher to student ratio was 1:1 to 3:1. His school funding revolved around his needs.
    Now if I hadn't been a single parent I would have lived in the U.S. because in general I like the company of Americans a lot more. In Canada you generally need an invite to a group to make friends whereas in the U.S. there is a general willingness to befriend complete strangers. Also Americans are risk takers that appreciate and respect that in others; not so much in Canada. In Canada as a car crasher I was mostly alone whereas in the U.S. I would have been part of a larger community. Just my two cents.

    • @AmeerCorro
      @AmeerCorro  2 месяца назад +10

      Thanks for sharing such a nuanced and personal take!

    • @Tyler_094
      @Tyler_094 2 месяца назад +21

      So basically everyone with HIGH needs and dependent on the system comes to Canada? This makes it more expensive for existing Canadians while we attract people who need the system and repel people who don’t really need it but would contribute. This is why none of us has a doctor or any sort of health care as a regular citizen in Canada.

    • @Nabee_H
      @Nabee_H 2 месяца назад +12

      ​@@Tyler_094 If you dont have a doctor you're probably new. Most people who have been here pre 2020 have doctors. Of course that will change if my doctor retires but until then I have one who has been with me since I was born and pretty much knows everything about my medical history. Everyone has high needs at some point in their life, I had some medical issues as a kid which didn't put my parents in debt and allowed me to get regularly checked, if my parents were in the US (which they moved from prior to me being born) and didn't have healthcare who knows what sort of unchecked complications I would've ended up with. When Im old I expect that same system to be there to take care of me so my family members aren't burdened with the cost. Its not people who are dependent, everyone's dependent, its people who think having that cushion to fall on to is worth the higher taxes; which in my opinion is. I don't care if my income is in the millions and the government is taxing me, i expect those taxes to cover more kids who are sick so they can grow into fine adults who will support the next generation after them just like me and the generations before me.
      People take our system for granted and it shows in your comment.

    • @Tyler_094
      @Tyler_094 2 месяца назад +6

      @ I’m not new lol I was born here 30 years ago. I moved out of my hometown at 18 and never got one after. I went to university clinic or walk in clinic for the last 12 years. I usually pay for naturopath and other alternatives

    • @kathyde1906
      @kathyde1906 2 месяца назад +5

      @@Nabee_H My doctor retired, I have a new one however it is because I live in big city. If you live in small town or village then if your doctor retires it would be very difficult for you to get a new one. Also you have to wait for a long time if you need a specialist. I had waited for more then half a year for a cancer specialist.

  • @MicheIIePucca
    @MicheIIePucca 2 месяца назад +73

    Wow.. this is one of the best Canada-US comparisons I've seen. I hear a lot of younger people almost focus solely on wages when deciding where to live, and don't really look deeper.

    • @Tyler_094
      @Tyler_094 2 месяца назад +10

      Wages is what buys us our shelter and food - the two basic necessities of life. If you can’t easily afford both on your wage, it can create a lot of anxiety and fear. I’d say it’s pretty important. Canada is also freezing cold.

    • @kathyde1906
      @kathyde1906 2 месяца назад +4

      @@Tyler_094 not all of Canada. I agree on other things. Wages are much lower in Canada and you can buy less for the same .

    • @Tyler_094
      @Tyler_094 2 месяца назад

      @@kathyde1906 I live in the warmest city in Canada, Victoria, and it’s still fairly cold compared to many U.S. cities. I grew up in Ottawa and escaped there as soon as I could but its -30 in winter there

    • @bc9554
      @bc9554 Месяц назад

      Would you say the same to immigrants who are coming to Canada for that exact reason?

    • @stereonacht2247
      @stereonacht2247 Месяц назад

      @@Tyler_094 Don't get into an accident, though. Or getting a serious illness. Not being able to go to work will have you lose your job, and thus, lose your healthcare coverage. And that will cost your your home, Temps don't have to go very low for you to miss your home...

  • @BrightSunFilms
    @BrightSunFilms 2 месяца назад +12

    Really great facts based analysis in a very well presented video! Loved it

  • @leeraewi
    @leeraewi 2 месяца назад +36

    I can't remember who I heard say it, and I'm paraphrasing loosely, but it's that the glass ceiling in America can seem astronomically high and yet the floor is also shockingly low and easy to fall through.

    • @leeraewi
      @leeraewi 2 месяца назад +9

      Also, I will say that not enough is said about the cultural, creative brain drain from Canada, which I surmise is probably even bigger than the tech brain drain we always talk about. Like, all of the biggest Canadian actors and musicians are generally based outside of Canada, predominately in the US. This isn't only about individual choice, but economic, trade and foreign relation structures that have been operating for multiple generations. Those interested in fashion, design, architecture, journalism, etc will also find better opportunities for study, employment and entrepreneurship in the US, UK, Europe or elsewhere, and thus we see those industries also quite underdeveloped here in Canada compared to other OECD countries of similar population.

    • @annepoitrineau5650
      @annepoitrineau5650 Месяц назад +1

      @@leeraewi But by the same token, a lot of US films/series are filmed in Canada.

    • @itsQueMajor
      @itsQueMajor 29 дней назад

      @@annepoitrineau5650.........so???? this was so irrelevant.

    • @darylsledge1456
      @darylsledge1456 10 дней назад

      @@leeraewi yeah, true. we don't think of Canada when it comes to Fashion. practically USA, FRANCE, ITALY, UK, JAPAN have designers that have dressed the world. I'm waiting Canada.

  • @bookkeepingtipswithty
    @bookkeepingtipswithty Месяц назад +13

    I moved from California to Alberta. Both have their ups and downs. Canada wins in my opinion.
    Income: There is a much bigger disparity between rich and poor in the U.S. Canada is much better for the average Joe, while top earners do much better in the U.S.
    Taxes: I've worked as a tax preparer in both California and Alberta. Alberta has lower taxes AND healthcare is included.
    Cost of living: U.S. is cheaper and has more availability and thus more market competition which drives consumer prices down. Remember to factor in exchange rates when looking at prices.
    Housing: Much the same, though U.S. prices fluctuate more.
    Career: Alberta has Way more opportunities IF you don't have a degree. Construction, trucking, etc. will get you peanuts in the U.S. while in Canada you can make a decent living. If you have a basic degree it's probably very similar in both countries, and if you have a masters or doctorate, U.S. is the place to be.
    Healthcare: All I can say is F the U.S. I can't wrap my head around how people can even live there with their HC system.
    Safety: Lets just say if you don't live in the millionaire neighborhoods, invest in firearms and keep them locked and loaded and close at all times.
    Stress: Canada is far less stressful for me.
    Social benefits: You actually get something back from the taxes you pay in Canada. Child benefits, Carbon Tax, GST. In the U.S. you get Jury Duty every year.
    People: I love people from both countries. I find Americans more outgoing and easier to get to know new friends. On the other hand, they can be opinionated and seem rude. Canadians can be very reserved and can seem snobby to a newby.
    Government: U.S. politics seemed to be more power hungry while Canada is a little more understanding towards its citizens.

    • @darylsledge1456
      @darylsledge1456 10 дней назад +1

      then, we don't have to worry about you ever visiting us again, that's the good thing.

    • @user-iu1ru1qz7u
      @user-iu1ru1qz7u 3 дня назад +1

      Your last comment about Canada being understanding towards its citizens renders your comment irrelevant.
      You're talking about the country that mandated an unnecessary jab on its citizens, violating their freedom, and when a protest eventually surfaced, government gave itself the power to remove them by force, like a dictatorial banana state.
      This is also the government that implemented the MAID program, and the one consistently raising taxes on its citizens as they're going through the worst financial times they've had in decades.
      Ridiculous.

  • @necrozim
    @necrozim 2 месяца назад +30

    Theres additional things that should be considered which is general insurance. It also dramatically varies between each province and state, but when I hear people say theyre leaving ontario to go for cheaper living in Florida, and then hear them complain about housing insurance and land taxes the difficulty to not say 'i told you so' grows. Also I suspect with their 'cheaper' healthcare policies as soon as theyre seriously ill, they'll come running straight back to Canada for almost free treatment.

    • @jesusdway8351
      @jesusdway8351 2 месяца назад

      You can't get free healthcare again in any province if you have lived outside of the country for more than 180days I think

  • @TheNewGreenIsBlue
    @TheNewGreenIsBlue 2 месяца назад +124

    In a nutshell.
    USA: Higher Risk. Higher Reward
    CAN: Lower Risk. Lower Reward
    There's also confirmation bias in this... A healthy person who didn't get sick in their life and was able to earn enough to become wealthy will have a different opinion... than someone who endures a tragedy.

    • @glenf6639
      @glenf6639 2 месяца назад +10

      The U.S. has a lot of safety nets. I grew up extremely poor and got my education via Pell grants that i did not have to pay back. We have WIC, food stamps, Medicare, Medicaid, ability to access social security early if disabled.

    • @josieramirez9483
      @josieramirez9483 Месяц назад

      @@realitywaveCanada has sunk just that Canada will fake it until they make it

    • @knorkeize
      @knorkeize Месяц назад +1

      GERMANY: Lower Risk. Even Lower Reward.

    • @AirinC-w4r
      @AirinC-w4r Месяц назад +1

      I wish the reasoning here was not no individual basis what is best for me, but in general what is average best for evryone, or is as society

    • @AirinC-w4r
      @AirinC-w4r Месяц назад +2

      I wish the consideration was not what is best for me, but what is best for all or on average

  • @noorkhorasi
    @noorkhorasi 2 месяца назад +41

    Samuel was my student at a local coding school in Vancouver. So good to hear from him about his progress in Vancouver and that he is still calling Vancouver his home. Do pass on my regards to him. Wishing him the best.

  • @theguywiththehat99
    @theguywiththehat99 2 месяца назад +7

    This was very well done. Good balance. I think most people are uncomfortable with an answer somewhere in the middle, but that's reality. Also, the country that works for you may change over time as well. Nothing remains static. Looking forward to Part 2.

  • @mysineadchannel3399
    @mysineadchannel3399 2 месяца назад +44

    I am a Canadian moved to US 3 yrs ago. So far US is treating us well. My kids
    Love it here due to a better weather. We can have move extra money compared to when we were in Canada. Life is so tough and we have more time to be with our family than we were in Canada.

    • @zackk6415
      @zackk6415 Месяц назад +2

      really? how about parental leaves and healtchare? i heard you don't realllly need to spend 400-1k a month for it, is it manageable even with these costs? can you work less than 40/week and have free time? i'm super curious my gf is doing nurse school in quebec, i do security system & alarm at a trade school we are both international students, do you think it's that good for the kids there? thank you in advance !

  • @vedantpatel2131
    @vedantpatel2131 2 месяца назад +13

    I've found through talking to people on both sides that if you're creative, like to engage in new ventures, and don't mind taking a bit of risk, the USA will reward you more. But if you value stability and a predictable life, Canada might be better.

  • @oscararrieta10
    @oscararrieta10 Месяц назад +8

    Dude, what an excellent video! I really enjoyed your comparison and your delivery of it. Keep up the great work. I'm just a fellow curious Canadian.

  • @hardcoreherbivore4730
    @hardcoreherbivore4730 2 месяца назад +22

    The State/Province you’re in likely has a greater effect on quality of life.

  • @AJ-vn4re
    @AJ-vn4re 2 месяца назад +114

    I'm a Gen-x Canadian, currently in LA, who has lived across the US during five discrete stays for a total of 15 years over the last 25 years. The difference between the two countries is the balance between quality of life versus quality of work. Quality of life is much better in Canada, but quality of work is much better in the US. Safety, work leave, cleanliness, and medical expenses, I say that as someone who has surgery a few times in both countries, are better in Canada. Yet, irrespective of income differentials, the scope, value, and quality of work I'm asked to provide in the US is commensurate with the full scope of my Canadian engineering training. While in Canada I'm asked to provide services far beneath my skill sets as Canadian industrialization beyond raw material production is nascent and lacking boldness. I moved back to Canada a few times for work but found myself reporting to people with far less competency and exposure due solely to Canadian lackluster industrialization.
    As someone who values developing creative work product, the US and Eurasia are far more enticing, but I often long to move back home to Canada. If only the work was there...

    • @Fernie-vv2ei
      @Fernie-vv2ei 2 месяца назад +11

      Thank you for this comment it was very informative

    • @AmeerCorro
      @AmeerCorro  2 месяца назад +11

      Quality of life vs quality of work is a really thoughtful comparison! I didn't think about it like that. Thank you for such an insightful comment.

    • @ilhan1936
      @ilhan1936 2 месяца назад +9

      This is a super helpful comment. i work as an architectural designer in Canada, was involved in multiple award wining projects in Toronto but I must say, I feel what you described almost every day working in Canada. Businesses are not interested in innovative approaches or higher productivity tools (such as software in my case). The general public is not interested in developing our cities and NIMBY's are dime a dozen, they just want to live in an imaginary world of 1970s, frozen in time. US is a lot more innovative and business oriented, clearly.

    • @XMG3
      @XMG3 2 месяца назад +13

      I have to disagree. I lived here in Vancouver BC for the past 35 years, with relatives in Seattle which I visit often. Canada is far worse place to be. The taxes and cost of living are doubled and wages are only 2/3 of the states. Yes we got beautiful mountains but the unaffordability is taking a huge mental stress on most canadians here

    • @AJ-vn4re
      @AJ-vn4re 2 месяца назад +4

      @XMG3 Vancouver is not the Canadian Seattle, but San Francisco. An honest assessment would be between those two cities. Please go to San Francisco with all the junkies and human waste on the sidewalks and compare it to Vancouver.

  • @im2randomghgh
    @im2randomghgh 22 дня назад +4

    A few points about healthcare in Canada:
    -Dental is covered now
    -Wait times are triaged. Some patients get specialist services in days or weeks as you'd expect, while non-urgent cases for in demand services in busy areas can be long, depending on who they're referred to. This is still much faster than spending years saving up for a heart procedure, like an American friend of mine has had to do.

    • @MichaelDomer
      @MichaelDomer 10 дней назад +1

      > "Dental is covered now"
      You don't tell the whole story, only people under 18 and over 70 are covered, so a rather small group.

    • @Dreaming875
      @Dreaming875 11 часов назад

      @@MichaelDomereveryone else who makes under 90k a year and has no other dental care can apply sometime this year

  • @legorocks99
    @legorocks99 2 месяца назад +16

    An in-progress answer isn't a bad thing man, holy hell was this video informative!! Was honestly thinking about a lot of this stuff lately too, so it couldn't have come at a better time 😅 Amazing video Ameer

    • @Hoba8
      @Hoba8 2 месяца назад

      Sameee

    • @AmeerCorro
      @AmeerCorro  2 месяца назад

      Thank you so much! I appreciate you as always for being here from the start :)

  • @racer193wr
    @racer193wr 2 месяца назад +37

    Canadian healthcare is not free. People work and pay taxes to support our FREE healtcare. Although the system seems to be mostly broken and is slowly eating itself in most provinces.

    • @DustinMulligan-w9b
      @DustinMulligan-w9b Месяц назад +3

      obviously. Everyone knows that. we still almost half what americans do on average, and revieve better care on average in almost every metric related to health than americans, on avaerage.

    • @islanddreamer2009
      @islanddreamer2009 Месяц назад +6

      He never says it is free. He analyzes taxes and then says there is no user pay when you actually need to go to the doctor. So yes you pay taxes. But if I need an expensive surgery and a 60 day hospital stay I am not bankrupt. Dialysis costs nothing. My mother's cancer treatment which costs $30000 per month in the USA cost nothing. Hit by a car? Costs nothing Get shot? (although WAY less likely in Canada it does occasionally happen) Hospital stay costs nothing. Ask all the bankrupt Americans who are being hounded by hospitals to pay medical bills which system they would have preferred. The real story is you are gambling how long it will take to hit a medical crisis. So if you average the cost of a single medical crisis over the years of paying taxes, you are highly likely to come out ahead in Canada at some point during your lifetime. And if you have enough money for whatever treatment you require you just skip the line and go elsewhere for treatment, in other words medical tourism. Neither country is perfect and it all depends on your priorities. Just remember that your priorities can change in a heartbeat when a medical crisis hits and that is the absolute worst time to be having to worry about money. Personally I would rather pay taxes now and be stress free in the event of a debilitating illness or injury

    • @joycekunzelman7435
      @joycekunzelman7435 26 дней назад +5

      taxes are not really that much more in canada :)

    • @krazyshady902
      @krazyshady902 15 дней назад

      You can never pay a tax in your entire life and still get free healthcare. Stop trying to justify it not being free just because a few cents on your pay goes toward it

    • @FarAlienShop1994
      @FarAlienShop1994 4 дня назад

      A lot of human trafficking being done by doctors,nurses and police in Ontario hospitals mainly Brampton,Mississauga,Toronto

  • @Daveoheight0808
    @Daveoheight0808 2 месяца назад +47

    Born and raised in Canada, worked as a blue collar worker, no house, rented a small 800 sq foot basement apartment with my 2 kids and wife and one washroom at the time $1250 a month. moved to America, moved to Las Vegas same type of job, have a 2400 square foot home for $1600 a month. I’ll never go back home.

    • @MrAlan1828
      @MrAlan1828 Месяц назад +6

      but you lost Health care so you'll need to pocket that out on your own times 3 and thats $$$, $1250 is that CAD or USD? $1600 is that CAD or USD?

    • @shehbazsingh63
      @shehbazsingh63 Месяц назад +2

      How u moved to america?

    • @CoolGrey7Man
      @CoolGrey7Man Месяц назад

      Good stay there.

    • @clararichardson2415
      @clararichardson2415 Месяц назад +1

      How is health care

    • @HappySIMCard
      @HappySIMCard 28 дней назад +1

      Currently in Winnipeg, planning the same move to Vegas. The states are so much better.

  • @PatS-h4r
    @PatS-h4r 6 дней назад +6

    Cost of living might be generally lower in the United States, but when you factor in the free healthcare in Canada, we definitely come out ahead over the course of a lifetime. More importantly, it just feels less stressful living in Canada. We don’t have anywhere near the level of violence that exists in most large US cities.

    • @Inyobizniz
      @Inyobizniz 6 часов назад

      I'm in the US and some employers including mine cover the cost of private healthcare insurance. Last year I paid one $50 copay and $48 for blood pressure medicine for the year. I'm $98 in the hole for the year, total out of pocket expenses. Those opportunities would be lost if our government implemented universal healthcare, I would have no choice.

  • @edwinskwok
    @edwinskwok 2 месяца назад +4

    My talk is that if you are entrepreneur type of person, you’ll find better opportunities in US. If you are not but Canadian with supportive parents back home in Canada, spend you first 10 or so years working in US up to mid-management level and settle your family back in Canada may give you a head start

  • @CynthiaHauu
    @CynthiaHauu 2 месяца назад +1

    I loved this. OKAY GRAPHICS!! So proud of you and I'm so excited for part 2!

  • @tesse470
    @tesse470 2 месяца назад +54

    I've lived in Vancouver longer than I have lived in my birthplace and I can truly attest to your Canadian facts and observation. From my age group perspective, I can add that if you're still young (20's to early 30's) and moving to the US, it is definitely a vast ocean of opportunities for you. If you're still adventurous even in your late 30's, I think there's still lots of opportunities in career growth. As for me, I moved to Canada in my late 30's and I felt the need to ground myself already as I have started a family then. All my friends who moved to the US surely made it more in dollar figures than me, but it doesn't mean that they are better off than me. I am happy and at peace here while I still get to have a taste of the US experience. So again, for me, it depends on your season in life and how you perceive success and contentment. Keep it up and shine brightly!!

  • @fahadenter2
    @fahadenter2 26 дней назад +2

    Amazing Video. I don't usually comment on videos but you earned it. Keep making informative videos likes these instead of making random videos for views like many other creators does.

  • @karthikagnesh7480
    @karthikagnesh7480 2 месяца назад +12

    Super Impressed with the analysis with clear cut backgroud details. Good Job

  • @blessedblessed1267
    @blessedblessed1267 Месяц назад +2

    Stumbled on your video and had to subscribe. You are very well spoken and your videos are top notch.No boring moment.

  • @nastasyayaremchuk2896
    @nastasyayaremchuk2896 2 месяца назад +5

    in BC, MSP coverage is also tiered along income so you have additional coverage (such as on prescriptions etc) if you are below a certain income threshold. People on disability support, for instance, get most prescriptions covered and free dental care. I would also mention that student coverage is amazing if you're in uni here, so much free mental health care too.

  • @janacvk1112
    @janacvk1112 7 дней назад

    Brilliant. I've already forwarded this link to several people. You have the Canadian communications style you described in your video - I love the absence of any 'bashing' and it's great to see that facts are alive and well.

  • @donpeters9534
    @donpeters9534 Месяц назад +15

    Canadian citizens
    The average cost for a Canadian citizen to study for an undergraduate degree is CA$6,463 per year, and CA$7,056 per year for a graduate degree. CA$28,000 over four years.
    The cost of a university education in the United States varies by the type of institution, the student's residency, and the level of study:
    In-state public 4-year institutions: The average cost of attendance for the 2024-2025 school year is $27,146 per year, or $108,584 over four years.
    If University in Canada is subsidized by the government, then Canadian Students do not leave with the same levels of Student Debt as US Students, so they don't need to earn the same amount of income to cover their Student Debt. However, if you can get a subsidized education and then move to a country where education is not subsidized and the salaries have to be higher to cover Student Debt, then the Canadian Student moving to the US for work is the winner. The US Student with US Student Debt working in the US is 'neutral'. The Canadian Student with lesser Canadian Student Debt working in Canada is 'neutral'. The US Student with US Student Debt working in Canada would be the loser...
    Canada should impose two different Payback Schedules, depending on whether the student remains in Canada and returns taxes to Canada after graduation, or goes overseas, subsidizing that overseas economy...

    • @jessevaarre8412
      @jessevaarre8412 Месяц назад

      100%

    • @ceeo1948
      @ceeo1948 Месяц назад

      But where are the jobs? It's double-jeopardy to suggest such. Canada doesn't provide enough opportunities; if a citizen happens to find an opportunity elsewhere, your advice is to tax them into oblivion so they learn a lesson i.e., not to build another economy with Canadian education? If Canada wasn't given to monopolies on every front, it would be an ideal place for young talent to stay, imo.

    • @vedanttaneja8578
      @vedanttaneja8578 20 дней назад

      My university tuition cost in the states was 15k a year, not 28

  • @alphaqbcosur2secc
    @alphaqbcosur2secc 13 дней назад

    Fantastic production, professional presentation; thank you for the upload... can't wait for part 2

  • @amillias4092
    @amillias4092 Месяц назад +3

    as someone who lives near the canadian border i have met alot of people from there and not one of them has ever chosen canada over the US. they even have the option to go back anytime they want and do not want to.

  • @notjoesaveragegardening6231
    @notjoesaveragegardening6231 2 месяца назад +42

    I find it crazy that the weather was not really mentioned. I don't love the heat.. but Vancouver being known as the good weather Canadian city and Seattle is known as one of the worst in the US is interesting noting their almost identical climates.

    • @michellechambers7615
      @michellechambers7615 2 месяца назад +6

      The Us has some places have much better weather than Seattle but Canada is cold and colder! Lol

    • @NorthStarPNW
      @NorthStarPNW 2 месяца назад +1

      @notjoesaveragegardening6231 Seattle one of the worst? Same as VBC. Try North Dakota, Buffalo, Houston for extremes.

    • @pastrevisited860
      @pastrevisited860 2 месяца назад +6

      @@NorthStarPNW Definitely worse climates than Seattle in America. But I think his point stands - an American could choose 100 more temperate places to live without leaving the lower 48. There are no such places in Canada.

    • @rollingthunderinho
      @rollingthunderinho 2 месяца назад +4

      Weather is completely subjective. Lots of people love cold dark winters

    • @DustinMulligan-w9b
      @DustinMulligan-w9b Месяц назад +2

      very flawed logic. Many Northern cities and east coast cities have similar wheather to every metropolis in Canada, hot summers, and cold ass, snowy winters. NYC, Chicago, Detroit, and dozen of other places really are very similar to Toronto, Calgary, Quebec City, Winnipeg, Edmonton in terms of weather. People say Seattle is a bad weather city, but they really just mean it rains a lot. Seattle has much better weather than all those US cities that have harsh winters. Most people would prefer Seattle weather to NYC weather. And if not, well than that would mean Canadian cities have better weather than Seattle to the average person. It is true that people complain about seattle rain alot, but it isnt considered a bad weather city, it has a much better climate that the east coast USA or northern interior states for sure, if youre like most people and dont like freezing half the year. Vancouver rains all winter, a lot in fall and fair bit in spring, but no snow hardly, and not too cold. Summer rains very rarely, and its a dry air, mild heat which is really nice Vancouver has fantasitc weather compares to most cities in North America, and so does seattle. Texas, California etc, have a heat problem in terms of weather. The rest of Canaca is comparable to much of the USA. cold as shit in winter, fine the rest of the year, and yes winter does suck in these cities, but meh.

  • @Knightriders8184
    @Knightriders8184 Месяц назад

    One of the best and realistic comparison video ! I have lived in US (3 years) and now Canada (15 years) and I can say that this is accurate description. It’s individual choice based on career, personal, life stage you are in.

  • @arrowwhiskers
    @arrowwhiskers 2 месяца назад +42

    I have never lived in Canada and am not qualified to compare them, but even in theory, I find the difference in climate to be a compelling factor. I grew up in Boston and found life quite miserable in winter. As an American, I take for granted that I can resettle in Los Angeles, Arizona, Florida, etc. The fact that the winters in Boston are milder than almost anywhere in Canada blows my mind a little bit.
    It's not a factor that probably would matter that much to most people, but for me it's been a major factor in quality of life.

    • @PeterKalu
      @PeterKalu 2 месяца назад +5

      Yeah, the weather can be a big deal. Vancouver has better "Winter" than Boston, although maybe more expensive.

    • @dandeon7742
      @dandeon7742 2 месяца назад +12

      I lived in Montreal for 15 years and visited Boston many times. I now live in Denver. I can tell you that once you head south from Montreal and get over the green mountains it is shocking how much warmer it is just a few hours south in the US. The winter in Boston is considerably milder than Montreal. Not even close.

    • @បេះដូង-ឡ5ទ
      @បេះដូង-ឡ5ទ 2 месяца назад +9

      I lived in both countries. This guy deliberately doesn't consider one of the most important factors to make Canada look better than it is. LOL.

    • @TheInsaneupsdriver
      @TheInsaneupsdriver 2 месяца назад +2

      I'm in Windsor, our weather is usually pretty great. we miss most of the worst of the storms due to where the great lakes sit don't get more then a few inches of snow every other year. we are also close enough to everything anyone could need within a 4 or 6 hour drive, both sides of the boarder. we used to be the cheapest place to live but unemployment sucks. the big difference is Canadians are too complacent politically and don't actually know what's going on in office. If they did know we wouldn't have a lib con duopoly and nether would ever hold office again.

    • @dandeon7742
      @dandeon7742 2 месяца назад +10

      @@TheInsaneupsdriver Agreed. Canadians are very complacent whereas Americans have a rebellious spirit to some degree. Canadians freedoms have steadily eroded over the decades but they put up no fight. Canadians overall trust in government leaves me shaking my head.

  • @profjay5034
    @profjay5034 Месяц назад +2

    This was fun and I'm not worried about little details or opinions. The journey of comparison, and the discussion that follows, is a decent one that sparks some ideas and thoughts about the similarities and differences that make up a typical North American. The amount of data and information you provide is as complex as it is is intriguing. Good work. Thanks!

  • @lookforaniket
    @lookforaniket 2 месяца назад +62

    To summarize, Canada is better if you're poor, but if you're middle income/rich, US is far better! (of course, comparing similarly sized cities)

    • @CommandoMaster
      @CommandoMaster Месяц назад +1

      Good summary

    • @Graham-e4p
      @Graham-e4p Месяц назад +7

      No.. life is better in Canada if you actually care about the poor. If you don’t, as is made evident with the crime, poverty, incarceration rate, GOOOO US.

    • @DustinMulligan-w9b
      @DustinMulligan-w9b Месяц назад +3

      thats not what I got from this at all. id say the other way around. Cost of living in cities like vancouver is very high. Its hard to live there if you arent well off. But there is more opportunity in America which is good if you are poor, and there are more low cost cities to choose from.

    • @CommandoMaster
      @CommandoMaster Месяц назад +1

      Canada makes u more poor. US makes u more wealthier!

    • @springbok29er
      @springbok29er Месяц назад

      Lordy there's too many weird Canadians on this thread. What does that even mean "Canada is better if you're poor". Canada is a neoliberal hellscape.

  • @thffkfltm
    @thffkfltm 7 часов назад +1

    I love living in Canada because this country has such beautiful nature.

  • @joanpletschet-carlson6975
    @joanpletschet-carlson6975 2 месяца назад +28

    I love my life in Canada. So much in the USA is so politicized. I’ve visited my cousins in the US many times. When I came home it was always like a breath of fresh air. 💖🥰

    • @bizhope007
      @bizhope007 2 месяца назад +2

      My sentiments exactly 💯🎯

    • @Nabee_H
      @Nabee_H 2 месяца назад +8

      Yep, the US is nice but after a couple weeks I get this growing weight on my mind like I'm in an area that's too repetitive. Having to drive everywhere, highways and concrete roads everywhere you look, the idea that i have nothing to depend on if something happens. Of course most of these are just being homesick but I still won't choose the US over Canada unless its to conduct business.

    • @kathyde1906
      @kathyde1906 2 месяца назад +5

      Canada was not politicized, that changed.

    • @babybunnie1840
      @babybunnie1840 2 месяца назад

      Wait when you are in the hospital in Canada with a heart attack or stroke, they pressure will be going if you come back to the hospital again and pressure you for MAID!!!

    • @formerfundienowfree4235
      @formerfundienowfree4235 Месяц назад

      Stay tuned

  • @sarahsokal
    @sarahsokal 2 месяца назад +22

    Being a WOMEN in Canada 🇨🇦 is better ... Abortion choice, salary freedom healthcare, generous double family allowance , Gov paid maternity leave ( can go to 12 month !) 8$/day daycare .... definitely!!!

    • @mountainwitn
      @mountainwitn Месяц назад +2

      It’s better for mothers. Not all women are mothers, some of us care more about money

  • @misteryeen
    @misteryeen 2 месяца назад +5

    In Canada you have only so many large, mid-sized and medium-small cities along a relatively thin invisible line mostly near-ish the border, assuming you want to live in an urban/semi-urban environment. There's so many more places you can go in the states, so much variety, that you are more likely to find a place that checks all the boxes for you with less compromises, unless your career is very niche and you have ambition to thrive in something, somewhere very specific.
    Then there's sales tax (and other taxes), which wasn't discussed as a financial factor. In Canada, it's often 12-15% in many provinces and tax is applied on more goods/services, which you might be inclined to compare to putting the difference into a more manual emergency medical savings account in the US (assuming you can afford to), like $3000 to meet insurance deductibles and so forth, which is effectively below the average difference between yearly sales tax expenses alone. The average sales tax in US is roughly 7.25%. Sales tax varies state to state (and city/county), where you, if you have the blessing of opportunity to choose, have more say in what fits you best. Ultimately, it boils down to more freedom of choice in the US due to inherent differences and disparities of locales, again assuming you're free to chose, vs stability and homogenization of a social benefits backstop in Canada. Depends on what you want to roll the dice for.
    Great fair video/analysis though; just thought to add a couple things I find myself thinking about often that I have noticed after living in both countries myself. :)

    • @AmeerCorro
      @AmeerCorro  2 месяца назад +1

      Thank you for leaving such a detailed and insightful comment! You’re absolutely right about the variety in the U.S.-the sheer number of cities, each with its own character, tax policies, and cost of living, definitely gives people more flexibility to find their ideal spot. Canada’s urban density near the border does limit options in comparison, which is an important trade-off to consider.
      Your point about sales tax is also something I’ve been thinking about. The Numbeo data I referenced in the video should account for consumption taxes (carbon tax for gas prices in Canada, "sin" taxes for alchohol prices), but I wasn’t 100% certain, so I tried to avoid doubling up on it when factoring in costs. You’re right, though-sales tax in Canada is often much higher and covers more goods/services, which can make a big difference over time. This is definitely something I want to tighten up in future comparisons!
      Thanks again for sharing these points; it’s clear you’ve given this a lot of thought, and I really appreciate your perspective!

    • @misteryeen
      @misteryeen 2 месяца назад

      @AmeerCorro There's loads of angles so it's quite a challenge to go over them all in such detail, however, I couldn't help myself this one time to add a couple since you provided great viewpoints.
      The end result of your video is that it's not as black and white as many like to say, which is refreshing to see. You did a great job covering quite a few points to the calculus. That said, I do have to say thank you for giving a very balanced and fair analysis without falling into a fan bias, very rare to see! Both countries are great in their own way. Having a chance to choose is a heck of a blessing and I hope you're happy with wherever you settle with in the future!

  • @richardkeshen9791
    @richardkeshen9791 Месяц назад +1

    Under the Canadian Dental Care Plan there is dental coverage for people over 65 or children under 18. Qualification is based on net family income. Also, at least in Ontario, there is coverage for prescriptions for seniors 65 or over. Once you've surpassed the annual $100 deductible you're left with paying only the dispensing fee which is usually around $4 per prescription item.

  • @hissingoose
    @hissingoose Месяц назад +22

    I’m in one of Canada’s “most violent cities” and grew up in a lower class neighborhood. Even when visiting the bad areas in town now I never feel like I’m going to be drive-by ‘d.
    I can’t say the same thing for some of the US cities I’ve been in.

    • @RazorIance
      @RazorIance Месяц назад

      yes, instead we have out of town hoodrats going to our nice suburbs and breaking into homes, stealing cars and robbing malls every other day in broad daylight.

    • @parsatayebi
      @parsatayebi Месяц назад +5

      1. thats anectodal
      2. at least in america the non-violent parts of cities are affordable to the average person

    • @SilasBlagdon
      @SilasBlagdon Месяц назад

      @@parsatayebi the violent parts aren’t even cheap in Canada 😂😂

    • @biohack9540
      @biohack9540 Месяц назад

      surrey? lol

    • @kevinl7173
      @kevinl7173 Месяц назад

      Toronto has more shootings and murders than many U.S cities

  • @kevincato9904
    @kevincato9904 4 дня назад +2

    Wow! I usually do not comment on these videos, but, this one I will. Well done! I am Canadian so I am a little bias but I think you did an excellent job in explaining the differences between the two countries. I will still choose Canada any day to live. Especially now! with Donald in charge. But, I think where you should look at in your next video is the education system for children in Canada compared to the US. I think hands down that we have a better education system. I have actually taught in the states and Canada. In my opinion we have them beat in that system. Keep up the excellent reporting and maybe you should change your career and become a documentarian.

  • @agentm83
    @agentm83 2 месяца назад +22

    it seems like the US is great if you're wealthy, and can afford to live in a nice area/provide for all your potential healthcare needs.
    for regular working/middle class people, Canada is probably better overall, unless there's a specific niche industry that you need to be in the US for.

  • @Aaa-f7o5e
    @Aaa-f7o5e 2 месяца назад +22

    The poorest states in the US have a higher per capita compared to major provinces in Canada. Health isn’t free it comes out of our taxes. Plus no dental. The prices of things are higher in Canada with lower salaries and taxes equivalent to the highest states in the USA. In US you can escape to a lower taxed state and still earn well, In Canada where do you escape to?

    • @DustinMulligan-w9b
      @DustinMulligan-w9b Месяц назад +2

      we will have dental coverage next year. And yes healthcare is tax paid, duh. Its still much cheaper.

    • @catginger3984
      @catginger3984 20 дней назад

      Exactly.

  • @rmeester9366
    @rmeester9366 2 месяца назад +24

    As a Canadian now living in the USA, Healthcare in Canada may be free but it’s not great and the waits are ridiculous. Ours isn’t perfect, but you can go wherever you want and not wait for treatment.

    • @flyspith7686
      @flyspith7686 Месяц назад

      Yeah but when you go to a hospital with a bloody nose or a broken arm the broken arm is priority and the bloody nose has to wait BUT if you have the money you can go ahead of the broken arm yeah that what you want money first..
      NOT priority you wait BUT Canada being open for immigration makes it a lot WORSE a LOT..

    • @stereonacht2247
      @stereonacht2247 Месяц назад

      @@flyspith7686 Immigration is a scapegoat. Seriously, if you believe Poilièvre blaming immigrants for everything, and Trudeau for immigrants and the rest, you need to open your eyes. Those immigrants were let in cause Canada was in a serious worker shortage. Would you have preferred companies to close up and move to the US to find their workforce?
      Also, housing shortage is due in good part to Harper (last conservative prime minister) giving tax break instead of reinvesting in infrastructure's after Chrétien managed to go from serious deficits into comfy surpluses. So of course, when the economy went down, Harper's tax cuts meant we went immediately into deficits again. Yeah, it's the conservative's fault, not the immigrants'.

    • @DustinMulligan-w9b
      @DustinMulligan-w9b Месяц назад +8

      average care if better in the states, statistiacally. If you can afford private healthcare, the USA has the best in the world, but its very very expensive. Canadians also pay about half of what americans end up paying on average, for better quality care.

    • @Hifin8-ug2sr
      @Hifin8-ug2sr Месяц назад +1

      I guessed you glossed over the point hat was mentioned....people who cant afford healthcare aren't in line. Where in Canada its available to everyone, so you wait longer.

    • @RuthBeyond50
      @RuthBeyond50 22 дня назад

      Where do you go for medical care in the USA where you dont wait? That said it does take a long time. Part of this is lack of providers because doctors are paid much less in Canada than the USA. In the UK is same. But yeah… I spent a week in a hospital in the USA and had great insurance and my co-pay was 20% and it cost me $7000 out of pocket.
      But for sure… if you are middle income and plan to have a family, Canada is better because schools are better and safer

  • @hollyannegriffin2546
    @hollyannegriffin2546 12 дней назад

    Good approach to describe the difference in foundations of the countries.

  • @TheWoodfordreserve
    @TheWoodfordreserve 2 месяца назад +34

    8:20 - "Free" healthcare does not exist; we pay a buttload of taxes for this "free" healthcare, it averages to $9,000 per year for every human in our country - whether they're employed or not.
    Since only 50% of our population works, we're looking at an average of $18,000/year in medicare costs that each working individual has to shoulder.
    So, while one would think we must have an amazing medical system considering how much our "free" medicare costs, the reality could not be further from the truth. Our medical system is so overloaded that I don't know ANYONE in Canada able to get treatment unless they're dying.
    Compare this to the USA, where unless you're working in a food truck you will get employer supplied medicare, and your $160 a month plan gets you access to literally the world's best hospitals and doctors - So, sorry, but Canada can no longer claim "medicare" as an advantage since we don't actually have services.

    • @quasimodem5260
      @quasimodem5260 2 месяца назад +15

      Breast cancer survivor here. Canadian healthcare totally took care of it quickly. I get your point but getting sick might change your mind.

    • @Summerrain6624
      @Summerrain6624 2 месяца назад

      ⁠@@quasimodem5260me too, cancer survival with multiple health issues needing frequent inventions and follow-ups, would have lost my house and be in major debt if it wasn’t for the Canadian healthcare system. I had the best Doctors and prompt care when I needed it most. We have our problems but I won’t trade it for anything

    • @TheWoodfordreserve
      @TheWoodfordreserve 2 месяца назад +8

      @@quasimodem5260
      What year did you get treatment?
      And as I stated above, you'll only get care if you're dying, correct me if I'm wrong but doesn't cancer kill people?
      For the record, I am sick, I'm speaking from my lived experience, on a 1.5 year waiting list for a necessary surgery after paying taxes for 30 years, but I was told it could be fatal if my condition gets worse and if I think I'm dying go into emergency and they'll do the surgery right away.
      In the meantime my quality of life is in the toilet.
      But seriously, what year did you go through this?
      Try and get any treatment in 2024, let me know how it works out.

    • @ashishkalam9337
      @ashishkalam9337 2 месяца назад

      I think the difference is, Working, young Canadians, pay for most of the old people who simple come (or return) to Canada to retire. Prescription meds in USA are about 1000 times more expensive than most other countries. Canadians can still pay for an insurance if needed just like US, Immigrants don't get free healthcare so they have to. Canadian healthcare can be bad, but over the last 5 years as an immigrant, my medical bills have far exceeded by insurance cost, and my insurance covered anything. In US, health care is more accessible but is really skewed by how much i pay and most affordable insurance don't cover anything expensive, and it's illegal to get medication from abroad. As a 20-sth guy, life is tough in Canada, 100%, but in a few years if i wanna have a family, if i want to have work life balance, raise my kids to have a normal childhood, US is terrible place to do that.

    • @Nabee_H
      @Nabee_H 2 месяца назад +2

      We all end up dying, your point is moot. Every human will go through the healthcare system at some point, allowing corporations to abuse the system and use it for profit is a horrible idea.

  • @Grandepau788
    @Grandepau788 Месяц назад +1

    liked and subscribed. love that someones dug into the details to share with us all their findings :D

  • @Randilynn66
    @Randilynn66 2 месяца назад +4

    Way back in the early 2000's. The price of chicken and dairy was exorbitant in Ontario because the government controlled pricing. I can't even imagine how much it is now.

  • @jacplanespotting314
    @jacplanespotting314 Месяц назад +1

    Love your comment "my goal is to encourage critical thinking, deep conversation, and reflection, not to hand out easy answers" (like a tough teacher who forces you to discover the answer yourself.....)

  • @IAMTHEGOONYT
    @IAMTHEGOONYT 2 месяца назад +12

    Keep in mind income tax is only 1 of the several taxes Canadians pay. Add the carbon tax, EI, CPP, social security, etc. and that nimber starts to look much higher

    • @brunob45
      @brunob45 23 дня назад +1

      I'm pretty sure EI and CPP are included in the presented figures, as they are usually collected directly from the employer.
      The carbon tax will go back in your pockets. If you're in Ontario, you'll get 500~1200$ per year in cash. Look it up!

    • @RuthBeyond50
      @RuthBeyond50 22 дня назад

      US also has unemployment insurance and pension deductions. Some states also have state income tax as well

  • @freshnelly
    @freshnelly 23 дня назад +2

    This was super interesting!! I dont recall you mentioning child benefits in Canada. My friend gets around $600/month for each kid, and she has 5 so that's a significant release of burden, especially since she is a single parent with a job and going to school all at once!

  • @georgepintilie8647
    @georgepintilie8647 2 месяца назад +115

    Canadians have "excellent public transit" that has to be a joke right? takes them 20 years to build a new subway line man

    • @JollyOldCanuck
      @JollyOldCanuck 2 месяца назад

      Canada's terrible public transit is better than the non-existent public transit in many parts of the US.

    • @MrKongatthegates
      @MrKongatthegates 2 месяца назад +34

      Some US cities have almost no public transit

    • @AmeerCorro
      @AmeerCorro  2 месяца назад +45

      What counts as "excellent" public transit, bike networks, or pedestrian infrastructure really depends on what you’re comparing it to.
      For instance, in cities like Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver, you’ll find extensive public transit systems (like subways, metro lines, and buses), growing bike networks, and highly walkable neighborhoods.
      Are these cities on the same level as Amsterdam or Tokyo? No.
      Is there significant room for improvement? Absolutely.
      But are they better than what you'd find in car-centric U.S. cities like L.A., Houston, and Atlanta, where public transit is almost non-existent in some areas? Without a doubt.
      As @MrKongatthegates pointed out, some U.S. cities barely have any public transit at all. Most large Canadian cities, even with their flaws, have functional public transit systems as a baseline.
      That said, I also recognize that smaller Canadian cities or suburban areas can be a completely different story. I grew up in a car-centric Canadian suburb myself, so I know the struggle firsthand.
      Canada has a lot of room for improvement when it comes to public transit, but it’s still far ahead of what you'd find in many American cities.

    • @georgepintilie8647
      @georgepintilie8647 2 месяца назад +7

      @@MrKongatthegates neither do 90% of our cities with the exception of like 4 or 5

    • @jakeb1381
      @jakeb1381 2 месяца назад +6

      @@georgepintilie8647 Hmm, you don't want to take the subway in the U.S. unless you're willing to take a risk with your life.

  • @miaann6647
    @miaann6647 12 дней назад +1

    I live in the U.S. currently and I have been thinking about Canada. There’s just so much going on here, as I am sure there is everywhere else too. A lot of the topics you touched on answered questions I had. I understand how someone could be more interested in a hustle like lifestyle and working hard to live a more luxurious lifestyle. Personally, I am on the mid to lower end of the scale as far as income goes. My job does not offer any health insurance and I was kicked off of medicaid a few years ago after covid began. I can’t afford the out pocket expenses of healthcare here and finding affordable private insurance has been nearly impossible. I would feel so much better with knowing I could have more peace of mind in Canada.
    I do still have questions, but I feel a little more knowledgeable about some of the differences between both countries.

  • @sandifryer3942
    @sandifryer3942 2 месяца назад +4

    In Canada we might seem to have better benefits for Old Age, but the cost of living especially in BC. A big portion can't afford rent/food. They have to choose.

  • @andyiswonderful
    @andyiswonderful 25 дней назад +1

    Wait times suck in the US, too. I waited 3 months to see an allergist, 3 months to see a neurologist, 3 months to see a dermatologist, and 6 MONTHS to see an ophthalmologist. I live in San Diego, and have good insurance.

  • @roffaleft499
    @roffaleft499 2 месяца назад +3

    Very thorough and comprehensive analysis, great job! I would add 2 more reason why the gross incomes in the US are higher than in Canada in 2024: 1) at will employment which, in turn, means a much higher risk for employees; and 2) USD has appreciated 30-35% since late 2014 against all major currencies (except CHF). 10 years ago the difference in gross incomes calculated in USD was much smaller than it is today.

  • @LearningandTechnology
    @LearningandTechnology 2 месяца назад +1

    Interesting comparisons - to make it even more challenging, think about age. When you are younger, you may be far less concerned about health, but more concerned about opportunity. You may also be more optimistic that you will be at “the top” of your career. However, being able to establish yourself, buy a home, or start a family may be concerning. Then, as you age, health and stability may become more attractive (and you may realize that “average” is the norm (by definition) and not everyone is in the top 20% (again, by definition). It’s at that point where priorities realign and things shift.

  • @radirandom
    @radirandom 2 месяца назад +31

    Regarding salary I am in electrical engineering and generally these careers are paid so much higher in the US to my knowledge. There also are other factors like auto insurance or buying a home for example.
    Also taxes here in Canada if you make 100 k do increase a lot.

    • @NacyGravy
      @NacyGravy 2 месяца назад +4

      @@radirandom Canada has far higher taxes and in United States, you have more bills to pay that’s not in taxes

  • @Graham-e4p
    @Graham-e4p Месяц назад

    This was really good. Best I’ve seen. It tells me that in a global world we can all find and live on a country that best suits our personality.

  • @SusanBelter
    @SusanBelter 2 месяца назад +3

    This is such an informative show. Excellent!!! Well done.

  • @emily_vaughn
    @emily_vaughn 23 дня назад

    A lot of this depends on the province you live in. Here's a bit of advice from personal experience living in Quebec, interacting with others from across the country in Ontario, N.B, Newfoundland, Manitoba and Saskatchewan, I don't have as much second hand experience from places such as PEI, Nova Scotia and B.C. I will not be talking about Yukon as it's an expensive place with low accessibility. I also have second hand experience from many people across the US.
    Quebec is generally 30% cheaper than Ontario, the social services are more generous and generally better, healthcare is different, more accessible to low-income people, but not necessarily better., rent is also generally much cheaper in Quebec also, especially in cities outside of Montreal and Quebec City. Quebec is great if you want to live somewhere with a different mentality, different culture and ways of life that are more similar to Europe, although, it's very much still influenced by North America, it very much depends in which Borough of Montreal, Town or City you live in, there's places that are anglophone, some mixed language (French & English), some are much more car dependent (Granby being a great example of a town that is), Some are generally much better for low income people with more social services, more cycling infrastructure and apartments right next to amenities, Centre-du-Québec Region for example. Quebec also has affordable housing programs and subsidies.
    www.pine.ca/blog/the-cheapest-places-to-live-in-quebec
    Both Quebec and Ontario have more infrastructure accommodating for pedestrians and people moving with alternative methods of transports than the vast majority of North American cities, especially in Montreal, Toronto and Cities with around 50 000 and more (avoid Fake London, it sucks even for cars). Edmonton and Calgary are catching up too. You often don't need a car unless you live in a suburb or a small town, which saves a lot of money, especially as a car costs over 16 000$ a year on average.
    www.pine.ca/blog/the-cheapest-places-to-live-in-ontario
    Newfoundland & Labrador and New Brunswick are much cheaper to live in, but much less urbanized and so you may spend more on transport and amenities.
    Saskatchewan and Manitoba aren't worth living in unless you're a farmer, in my opinion.
    www.pine.ca/blog/the-cheapest-places-to-live-in-new-brunswick
    www.pine.ca/blog/the-cheapest-places-to-live-in-newfoundland-and-labrador
    Prince Edward Island isn't really affordable anymore, Housing is cheaper than other parts of Canada but has changed dramatically. You will pay 800-1 million for a nice 2500 sq ft home. There is a 0% rental vacancy so rent prices are very high. Groceries and all other costs are same as other places in Canada except for cheaper electricity but more expensive gasoline. It is a very safe and tranquil place to live though.
    www.pine.ca/blog/the-safest-places-to-live-in-pei
    Nova Scotia has some of the cheapest houses and rent in the country, but low population and lower accessibility.
    www.pine.ca/blog/the-cheapest-places-to-live-in-nova-scotia
    Ontario is quite expensive unless you live in a smaller city, which will usually have worse infrastructure than many places in Quebec, Windsor is one of those more affordable places. Avoid London, trust me, it sucks. Check Not Just Bikes' RUclips Channel.
    www.nesto.ca/lifestyle/cheapest-places-live-ontario/
    Manitoba and Saskatchewan are also quite cheap but much more car dependent and
    www.pine.ca/blog/the-cheapest-places-to-live-in-manitoba
    www.pine.ca/blog/the-cheapest-places-to-live-in-saskatchewan
    In Alberta, Edmonton and Calgary are pretty solid, both have changed their zoning bylaws for more affordable living and housing. Things are getting much better here thanks to blanket rezoning in Calgary and Zoning Bylaw Renewel in Edmonton. Red Deer, Grande Prairie, Medicine Hat and Lethbridge are good alternatives, unless you wanna live in a small town. Alberta also has an affordable housing program as well as family and social supports.
    www.pine.ca/blog/the-cheapest-places-to-live-in-alberta
    B.C is fine if you don't live in the expansive places such as Vancouver or a resort town like Whistler, it also has good social services. it is considered to have the best healthcare services in the country, although this may have changed since the pandemic.
    www.pine.ca/blog/the-cheapest-places-to-live-in-bc
    Overall, it really depends where you live, but, in my opinion, Canada is better. There's more than enough work opportunity if you live near or in the bigger cities, the healthcare, lower crime rate, lower living costs of many provinces and social services more than make up for whatever extra work opportunity you could obtain in the US. Although, our justice system is absolute garbage and self defence is essentially not a thing. There are also certain things such as gun ownership, if that's your thing, that sucks up here, so depending who you are, what you do and what your hobbies are, the US might be better for you still. Some states may be better than others for you, some provinces may be better than others for you too. At the end of the day, we all come from different backgrounds and have different needs, some places are going to be worse for some, but better for others, pick and choose, I guess.

  • @SeemaZI
    @SeemaZI 2 месяца назад +4

    Even though I never lived in America and live in Canada, I would prefer America because I’ve never been to Canada before moving to Canada. There are downsides and upsides to everything. I also want to move to USA because I want to be a businessperson and I find America more business friendly than Canada because of less regulation

  • @T3XACAN0
    @T3XACAN0 Месяц назад +1

    I am Canadian and the only time I went to the USA, was when I went shopping in Buffalo, NY, with my family, the only difference from my experience was that when I went to Buffalo and went to Denny’s, the burgers were HUGE! There were so many variety of stores in the mall (not sure which mall we went to?) back when I went there in the mid-2000s. But I can say that it was cheaper to shop in the USA than in Canada.

  • @CanadianGrowerYT
    @CanadianGrowerYT 2 месяца назад +36

    I've lived In Canada for my entire 30 years, 11 of which I've been here in Toronto and it's sad to say but the country has fallen dramatically over the last decade. The average cost of a house in Toronto has risen to 1.2 M, the average income is 60k, food cost has risen over 20% since the pandemic and the influx of low skilled Indian immigrants is completely out of control. Trudeaus carbon tax is actively attacking Albertas gas and oil sector and the cost will certainly be passed onto the Canadian people. Our economy has fallen and will take a LONG time to recover. The best thing to do at this point is cash out my investments and GTFO out of dodge...

    • @person51035
      @person51035 2 месяца назад

      The Indian immigrant influx is RUINING Canada.

    • @TheTroyc1982
      @TheTroyc1982 2 месяца назад

      Most Canadians get more money back fromt he gas tax than they pay in. only the richest Canadians pay more in Gas tax than they receive in rebates.
      If we eliminate the gas tax basically you would be taking money away from middle class and poorer Canadians

    • @rollingthunderinho
      @rollingthunderinho 2 месяца назад +4

      Housing is up everywhere around the world. Oil sands at highest production in Canadian history. Economy is stable, didn’t enter into recession, inflation already below 2% target. Next.

    • @krutikapatil6357
      @krutikapatil6357 2 месяца назад

      ironically the most skilled workers are also Indians. The low skilled workers you talk about are temporary students who work part time and get high paying jobs after graduating. You feel the burn because you stay at low paying jobs which can't fund the lifestyle that you were used to. So cope and hate is all you've got. Indians have no choice but to work really really hard. I think a mirror will show you who the low skilled worker is.

    • @ccva780
      @ccva780 2 месяца назад +3

      ​@rollingthunderinho Not true, GDP per capita has been in a recession for years now. I suggest you take a proper economics course, plenty of free ones here on RUclips.

  • @LadyJane222
    @LadyJane222 Месяц назад +1

    The wait times for doctors listed in Canada are a generalization. I’m in Toronto and my husband had to see an ENT specialist after a trip to the ER and he got an appointment in 2 weeks. My father saw an oncologist in a couple of weeks. So, I think it depends where you are in Canada and what type of specialist you need to see. Not everyone has to wait months to see a specialist.

  • @tiffanygoss9380
    @tiffanygoss9380 2 месяца назад +13

    You left out a big factor for some of us…weather…also entertainment, food, variety, beaches, etc. love Canada but as a person with seasonal affective disorder it isn’t for me.

    • @boredguy5805
      @boredguy5805 2 месяца назад

      Entertainment and Food in Toronto/Vancouver/Montreal is better than most American cities. For food, probably the only place better in the US is NY, because they have equal diversity.
      But Weather and Beaches I 100% agree with

  • @MowizosCrib
    @MowizosCrib 2 месяца назад

    Even though you didn’t give a definitive answer, which would have been subjective anyways as you pointed out in the beginning, this was a very insightful video and really highlights the strengths and weaknesses of both countries. Great video. 👍🏾

  • @BrentMcDonald-t5t
    @BrentMcDonald-t5t 2 месяца назад +24

    Canadian healthcare isn’t “free”. It’s tax funded. Basically people who work pay for the “free” healthcare for those who don’t work.

    • @charlenepowell7610
      @charlenepowell7610 2 месяца назад

      Yes, but NO one in Canada has to declare bankruptcy if they get sick, or worse…die! Emergency healthcare is done immediately. Yes, we wait for elective surgeries or for non emergencies but I’d rather know that ALL Canadians are looked after by MY taxes. I lived in the US. OMG. Most vile healthcare on the planet…unless you’re wealthy.

    • @dixonpinfold2582
      @dixonpinfold2582 2 месяца назад +8

      He repeatedly said that health care in Canada is free "at the point of service," or some similar phrase. No one ever claims that doctors work for free. Taxes go to paying them, and even preteens understand this.

    • @boredguy5805
      @boredguy5805 2 месяца назад +1

      Did you even bother watching the video or do you just like to complaim

    • @BrentMcDonald-t5t
      @BrentMcDonald-t5t 2 месяца назад

      @@boredguy5805 I watched the video. Goof. Sorry your mom drank when pregnant.

    • @BrentMcDonald-t5t
      @BrentMcDonald-t5t 2 месяца назад

      @@dixonpinfold2582 time and place tough guy.

  • @InformationEngineer59
    @InformationEngineer59 6 дней назад

    Thanks for the well-thought video. As a Canadian who lived the software developer's dream in silicon valley for 10 year and who returned to Canada I will say that you mostly hit the nail on the head. I did find, however, that my taxes were notably higher in California than in Vancouver when I lived there in the 90s. I have moved back to Canada, and have been deeply satisfied with my decision. Factoring in the political craziness going on in the states right now, I am doubly, no triply satisfied.

  • @abij4247
    @abij4247 Месяц назад +4

    As someone who lived in Vancouver Canada 🇨🇦 for a year and moving back to Chicago Illinois 🇺🇸 I would say America 🇺🇸 is better regarding the financially quality of life and the positive economic opportunities that are present there. Next topic: Social quality , id say the Canada 🇨🇦 there is a culture of respect in Vancouver at least. I’ve never meet any serious gangs like you will see in Chicago and New York so it’s safer in Vancouver except in east Hastings street because there are a lot of druggies. I’ve been to east Hastings and many of the druggies have been very polite and respectful. That doesn’t mean they’re all like that. But it’s not like Chicago where gangs and homeless people come up and harass you. I’ve experienced that many times and would recommend to go to Chicago with a group of people unless you’re in Michigan avenue

    • @MichaelDomer
      @MichaelDomer 10 дней назад

      Anyone who starts to compare Vancouver to the USA, to make a point about Canada is a clown... and I'm dead serious.

  • @odalisvargasyaho
    @odalisvargasyaho 22 дня назад +1

    you are dreaming a 2 bedroom apt in Chicago will cost around 1200 dollars wile in Toronto
    a 2 bedroom apt will cost 2800 what are you talking about

  • @carbon4climate
    @carbon4climate Месяц назад +2

    Was expecting that answer. Great research and presentation.

  • @Eric-zs6rd
    @Eric-zs6rd 2 месяца назад +10

    I think there's a big flaw in looking at the numbers purely from a percentage basis. Say you live in a Canadian city where the income to cost of living ratio allows you to save 20% of your income vs an American city where the ratio allows you to save 12% of your income if that American city. You might count that as a win for the Canadian city. But if you're earning 50k USD in the Canadian city, saving 20% means saving 10k/year while 100k in the American city at 12% means saving 12k/year. When you look at the endgame of being retired, you are going to look at your nest egg as a total amount saved and not the percentage you saved. You should look at the absolute numbers.

    • @DustinMulligan-w9b
      @DustinMulligan-w9b Месяц назад +1

      your logic is flawed too. The average american isnt making DOUBLE what a Canadian makes lol, and even then, that would only be 2k more in savings using your 50k, 100k example.

  • @ArtJunkie
    @ArtJunkie 14 дней назад

    When it comes to vacations most of Canada is freezing in the winter where as only some of the us had winter. I think this plays a big role in vacations for Canadians 😊

  • @CoolGrey7Man
    @CoolGrey7Man Месяц назад +18

    I'm a Canadian and I will never want to live in the States. A lot of what you talked about I have feelings and knowledge of that already and that is why no thanks USA. Maybe because I'm not a go getter, not greedy to have tons of money. I'm a computer artist and have been fortunate to make good money because of my talent. A safe simple life is more important to me than the go go work atmosphere that is most prevalent in the States. While visiting Portugal I met many Americans that moved there and found out that many moved out of the States due to bad health insurance and the violence. I met 2 women who were school teachers, one from Denver and one from Seattle who were afraid to go to work at their schools due to School shootings. Canada has bad stuff also and even many cities in the world are not perfect. Give me Canada, eh! Also just my opinion, the best music education place is in the UK.

    • @darlenekaus3189
      @darlenekaus3189 11 дней назад

      I wouldn't live in the Divided States of America even if you gave me a million dollars to move there.

  • @khalidshah5048
    @khalidshah5048 9 дней назад +1

    It's the same country

  • @thenetworkmystery
    @thenetworkmystery 2 месяца назад +3

    What an amazing video! I appreciate how you've compared every important aspect to consider when living somewhere. I've visited Canada once about a decade ago (Toronto and Montreal), and would like to visit again. I can even see these differences between U.S. states. I was born in New Mexico (quite a poor state, but plenty of job opportunities in the arts), and moved to Wisconsin (fewer opportunities in the arts, but a wealthier state). Both states have a similar (low) cost of living, however.

    • @AmeerCorro
      @AmeerCorro  2 месяца назад +1

      Thank you so much-I’m glad you enjoyed the video! Moving from New Mexico to Wisconsin must’ve been an interesting shift, especially with the trade-offs in arts opportunities and incomes. How have you found the arts scene in Wisconsin compared to New Mexico?
      Also, I hope you get the chance to visit Canada again! Toronto and Montreal are fantastic, but the smaller cities have such a unique charm too. Thanks for sharing your perspective!

    • @thenetworkmystery
      @thenetworkmystery 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@AmeerCorro Sorry, I just saw this!! I've noticed a number of things (keep in mind, I am a college student in WI, and thus, not living there full-time. I am less established as a musician in WI compared to my home state of NM). I've started with music-related stuff, and moved on to general stuff farther down the list:
      - Standard jazz gigs tend to pay more in WI compared to NM. A gig that pays $125 in NM might pay $175-200 in WI, in my experience. But this is not the end-all-be-all; I've played $500 gigs in NM and $100 gigs in Wisconsin.
      - WI's venues are more spread out, maybe except for Milwaukee (but I've actually never been there, at least yet). Both NM and WI have two major cities (Milwaukee and Madison, and Albuquerque and Santa Fe, respectively).
      - People are more respectful of your time in WI than in NM, and are more organized - New Mexico is (in)famously known as "the land of mañana" - which I take to mean, "I will talk to you later, not now." I constantly have to keep bugging people in NM to respond to my inquiries for gigs, recording sessions, etc., which does not happen as much in Wisconsin.
      - The city of Milwaukee (WI) is considerably poorer, by statistics, than the city of Albuquerque (NM).
      - Appleton (where I attend college), is a nice small city. Not very walkable or bikeable, but traffic is not very bad, and the airport is close, which flies to regional destinations such as Chicago and Minneapolis.
      - The internet is better in Wisconsin than in New Mexico. More of Wisconsin is covered by fiber internet than New Mexico (NM still relies on cable for internet).
      - Though I did not grow up in Wisconsin and did not go through the public school system, it has become very clear to me that the public schools in WI are FAR BETTER than New Mexico's - mostly due to WI being a wealthier state with more resources and money to throw toward education.
      - Simply put, Wisconsin is wealthier in part because it has more resources (namely water). New Mexico has almost no water (Arizona and Colorado steal water from the Colorado River, and Texas steals water from the Rio Grande River, leaving New Mexico with hardly any). Additionally, New Mexico relies on oil and gas to maintain its economy, but this results in a lot of cheap labor and an economy that relies on fluctuating industries, . HOWEVER... ironically, there are TWO national laboratories in New Mexico. Weird contrast there.
      - Adding to this: Wisconsin's GDP is $414.4 billion, while New Mexico's is $130.3 billion.
      - Unfortunately, demographic and ethnic issues also contribute to New Mexico's poorness.
      I could keep going, but I think this is enough of a comparison. Hope it helps!!

  • @quickstiiks
    @quickstiiks 2 месяца назад +1

    Really well done video! From the research, editing, production - just subscribed dude!

  • @salah.3034
    @salah.3034 2 месяца назад +33

    Hit $200k today. Thank you for all the knowledge and nuggets you had thrown my way over the last months. Started with $14k

    • @Mavistyio
      @Mavistyio 2 месяца назад +7

      I will forever grateful to you, you changed my entire life and I will continue to preach on your behalf for the whole world to hear you saved me from huge financial debt with just a small investment, thank you Mrs Sophia

    • @gabrielada
      @gabrielada 2 месяца назад +6

      Yes! I'm celebrating $132K stock portfolio today... Started this journey with $10K....
      I've invested no time and also with the right terms, now I have time for my family and life ahead of me.

    • @OnunuChukwukaKelvin-w1v
      @OnunuChukwukaKelvin-w1v 2 месяца назад +2

      I'm 60 and my wife 53 we are both retired with over $1 million in net worth and no debt currently living smart and frugal with our money. Saving and investing lifestyle in the church stock market made it possible for us this early even still now we still earning weekly

    • @LucyAndrew-ct7iu
      @LucyAndrew-ct7iu 2 месяца назад +1

      Trump win brought me happiness same day I made over $267k as my frist profit trading cryptocurrency,

    • @LucyAndrew-ct7iu
      @LucyAndrew-ct7iu 2 месяца назад +2

      Thanks to Sophia ❤

  • @sandyah.3054
    @sandyah.3054 Месяц назад +2

    Well made video & I like your voice that sounds very comfortable and pleasing. Good job 👍

  • @victoriapearce6145
    @victoriapearce6145 2 месяца назад +3

    Well done. A fair comparison. Im very happy to give a little more fir the security, comfort and beauty of Canada

  • @MobileGreen-nu6pc
    @MobileGreen-nu6pc Месяц назад +1

    Great stuff Ameer! Did you ever think of a career in Music AND Journalism? As a Canadian married to an American I can add that city/municipal housing taxes are much lower in CANADA mostly due to provincially pooled school board funding, e.g. we pay between a quarter and one third of our my wife's American sisters (and we pay in $CDN).

  • @pattyd8681
    @pattyd8681 18 дней назад

    Wait times are dependent on the needs of the patient. If you advocate for yourself, you can move ahead more quickly. My friend is having knee surgery tomorrow - moved up by a month from his original date - because he called and stated his increased pain and willingness to be available at any time. "The squeaky wheel gets the grease" is an absolute in healthcare.

  • @donnamariecann5259
    @donnamariecann5259 2 месяца назад +3

    I like your research levels. I will say healthcare in Canada has failed me due to the lack of qualified surgeons. I have a workplace injury that I am almost 2 years in. I have a UK leading surgeon who is willing to operate and would have had me back at work in 6 months. I will not be back at work before 2 years unless something amazing happened.

  • @fredmurman1360
    @fredmurman1360 Месяц назад

    Congratulations, Ameer to your excellent video. Totally without bias and very informative.

  • @keithmoriyama5421
    @keithmoriyama5421 2 месяца назад +18

    If you're poor, Canada. If you're rich no comparison-- USA!

  • @satanspy
    @satanspy 9 дней назад +2

    this is a complete waste of 31 mins... he does the old... "It depends" and "think for yourself" routine and never gives a binary clear answer.

  • @GreatestRiceMuncher
    @GreatestRiceMuncher 2 месяца назад +12

    As a legal immigrant before justin trudeau was elected, I would've absolutely recommend Canada to anyone if this was 15 years ago, but nowadays, don't come here, it is hell.
    Architecture: EVERYWHERE IS JUST ASPHALT!
    Entertainment: mostly nothing to do unless you like nature
    cost of living: ∞
    Culture: Bland, boring, no dreams, no inspirations
    Happiness: literally see people living in 3rd world have happier lives. If you go out of the big cities, it will be mostly fine.
    Politicians: we have an idiot for a government, and the blue party has a politician with his whole entire point being "atleast I ain't Trudeau"
    Healthcare wait time: ∞

    • @GreatestRiceMuncher
      @GreatestRiceMuncher 2 месяца назад +1

      Good things that remain in Canada
      People: despite living in a mess, they are kind
      Landscape: Nice, but Vancouver really carries it.
      Food: despite being controlled by mostly fast food (Tim Hortons has fallen), their cooking feels humble.

    • @markwickens2756
      @markwickens2756 12 дней назад

      Canada is better off now that you are gone. Enjoy your Trumpistan.

    • @GreatestRiceMuncher
      @GreatestRiceMuncher 12 дней назад

      @@markwickens2756 Just because I dislike Canada, doesn't mean I like the US either.

  • @kevinmichel8623
    @kevinmichel8623 2 месяца назад +2

    Interesting video, I live in So Cal. For me, I would add more categories, like weather, politics, food, people and things to do. I've been to beautiful Vancouver and I can't wait to see the rest of Canada. Peace and blessings

  • @kevinb8109
    @kevinb8109 2 месяца назад +13

    I’m an American who travels across the states and provinces frequently. One thing I definitely notice is that businesses in the provinces seem to always be out of products. For instance, I love Starbucks bagels. When I was in Canada last year, every store I visited across QC, AB and BC were always “out” of plain bagels and certain other items. Shelves were just not stocked like they are in the US.

  • @robil8168
    @robil8168 Месяц назад

    It seems to me that many viewers say thing like Canada has expensive housing and rents. Turns out he/she is talking about Toronto, Vancouver or Montreal. They are not Canada. They are just cities within Canada, a part of Canada. In the states, there are suburbs. In Canada, they are called towns or cities. Many are just about 1 hour drive from major city centers. They have different jurisdiction and taxes. Usually they are not as populated in the major cities and thus have lower rents, lower housing prices, etc. Many provinces in Canada have quite decent rents, housing price, etc. There is also a generalization that is misleading and insulting to Canadian. Canada education sucks and job pay better in the States and have better quality etc. I worked in both Canada and the US. I even spent one and half year working in Honolulu. I do not feel the differences. Taste is all individualistic and subjective. There are many factors for job satisfaction. In case you are not aware, there are, many Nobel prize winners in Canada. The recent AI craze is actually started by two University of Toronto graduates student under Geoffrey Hinton who is dubbed as the "Father of Deep Learning" in the early 00's ( I believe it was around 2007). Tax is another misconception. But I am afraid this post is getting too long. Maybe some other time. But be open minded. Immigration is not a simple decision. I am an immigrant and I love Canada. But I still miss my home country and the city where I grew up. Best wishes and successes for your future endeavor. No hate and may your conscience be your guide.

  • @Sleepyfeline2017
    @Sleepyfeline2017 2 месяца назад +34

    I was an international student in Canada a long time ago but eventually moved to the US and became an American citizen. Much prefer the US. The problem with Canada is that a lot of new comers (like when I was an international student myself) only went to Canada because they thought it’s similar to the US but much easier to move to permanently… the minute they can move to the US they don’t walk they run (myself included)… “you don’t want someone date you because you look like a hot guy that’s too difficult to date… you want someone to date you for who you are.” The US is not perfect but if you have to choose between Canada and US, the US has so many more economic opportunities and the landscape is so much more diverse. However I would say that if you are dirt poor it’s better to be in Canada but if you are middle class and above, USA is the place to stay

    • @annemarie3140
      @annemarie3140 2 месяца назад +14

      In Canada we're not too happy with the idea that many people apply for student visas with the intention of easier citizenship. We feel used and abused by many internationals wanting to immigrate for our social safety net. Why not the Scandinavian countries that have even more comprehensive social programs? I take offense that you say "if you are dirt poor it's better to be in Canada". A lot of the world is trying to stuff itself into 2 countries that don't have the infrastructure, housing or health care.

    • @devinmes1868
      @devinmes1868 2 месяца назад +17

      As an American, I'd say the economic opportunities are the only real advantage we have over Canada (aside from hospital wait times, I guess). We simply have a stronger, more rewarding labor market. But as the video said and showed, there is more to life than high salaries and job opportunities, of which Canada is either highly competitive or out-right superior in most other metrics.

    • @davidmadison3197
      @davidmadison3197 2 месяца назад

      Always better in a white majority nation Is it not brown man ?. Non-whites will not leave us the fk alone...
      3rd world diversity sucks for white nations...
      Go Home !
      Reply

    • @Nabee_H
      @Nabee_H 2 месяца назад +4

      ​@@annemarie3140 It is definitely true though, however, international students are intended to simply study and shouldn't hold any other motivation. If you want to come here to use our taxes then you must commit to staying here and paying them back, which most international students don't care for. It's easy to abuse and it's solely the governments fault for allowing it. There should be a debt system the government uses against migrants, one which will be wiped if they pay taxes for a certain period/gain citizenship. If they leave the country before that period then they should be required to pay the debt (our taxes) back.

    • @johnnywakdal
      @johnnywakdal 2 месяца назад +7

      I was an international student from France. After graduation I became a permanent resident and later became Canadian. From the time I graduate, I was working full time and paid my federal and provincial taxes. In my job, I employed 6 people. I do not feel that I have taken advantage of my adopted country in any way.
      Please note also that the social safety net in France is superior to Canada. IMO. Also when you start working over there, you get right away 4 week vacation, and in many companies, you get a 13th month salary at XMas.

  • @Gohary936
    @Gohary936 2 месяца назад +1

    That's a pretty well balanced and comprehensive analysis. Love it !