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Miscellaneous See other Miscellaneous Articles Title: Best Places in the World to Retire If you had $20,000 a month to retire on you could live lavishly pretty much anywhere on the planet. But were interested in the places where you can live that lifestyle on one-tenth the budget... Places where you can have a maid clean for you...hire a gardener... wake up to a view...have great health care, eat well, enjoy the finer things in life for less than $2,000 a month. You may be surprised how many there are... Months ago, our far-flung editors and in-country advisers began collecting all the data and details that inform our annual Retirement Index. To compile it, we evaluate and rank countries around the world according to eight crucial categories: real estate, special retirement benefits, cost of living, ease of integration, entertainment and amenities, health care, retirement infrastructure and climate. This is a qualitative assessment, based on real-world data gathered on the ground. For each category in our Index, we looked closely at what matters most to you when youre considering an overseas retirement spot everything from the price of bread to how easy it is to make friends or stay in touch with family. We considered a vast range of data points, from the average humidity to the cost of a taxi. And with costs in mind, we examined prices for real estate, rentals, and utilities like water, electricity, and cable TV. We looked at costs for groceries, eating out, even specific medical procedures. We took into account what kind of discounts retirees can get on travel, taxes and entertainment. And we considered whether there were direct flights back home...how many and how long they are, too. And we asked: What is the Internet like? Do you need a car? Can you catch a movie in English? Are the people friendly? Does it rain? In effect, we asked all the questions you should ask when youre considering a retirement overseas. This years Top 19 foreign locations are listed below: The Top 19 Retirement Destinations Numbers and rankings dont tell the whole story, of course. When it comes to relocating overseas, there is no such thing as one size fits all. So the staff and global correspondents of International Living also recorded a wide range of boots-on-the-ground testimonials from folks who have retired to these various foreign locales. Take Daphne Newman, who lives in Caribbean Honduras. Shes spending just $1,400 a month to live yards from a white-sand beach on the island of Roatan. Only a three-hour flight from the US, English- speaking Roatan with its world-class reef just offshore, is an easy place to make friends and fit in. It lands mid-table in this years Index. Jack Griffin and his wife Margaret have opted, by contrast, for city life in Nicaragua. When the stock market crashed and the value of their home in the States plummeted by 30%, they began to worry about how to fund their retirement. The final straw came with a 37% hike in their annual health-insurance premium. At age 60, they felt they deserved the retirement they had worked for all their lives, so they found a new home in Managua, the countrys capital. Today their international medical insurance costs them 62% less than their policy did back home (yet their local hospital is internationally accredited and the doctors speak English). Retired now without money worries, they spend their days exploring, horseback riding, going to the beach or gym, and doing yoga. They have a full-time maid and a gardener and, says Jack, We do it all for less than half the cost of a moderate lifestyle back home in Atlanta, Georgia. Chuck and Jamie Bilbe, ready to retire in Florida, found themselves in a situation similar to the Griffins. We were concerned that our retirement savings wouldnt see us through, so we began looking overseas for a place where our ever-shrinking nest egg might last longer, says Chuck. Now they live in Corozal, Belize, their cost of living is much lower than it was in the States, but thats not the greatest appeal. What they say they like most is the Old-World lifestyle. Like Florida in the 1950s, they say. Were eating better, sleeping better and enjoying social activity much more now than we did before. Its not just destinations south of the States that appeal. Pam Griner Leavy and her husband Jim are just two of the more than 100,000 American expats living in France. Theyre retired in Paris on a reasonable $3,149 a month. There are so many things for free here, or reasonably priced...big-city life is good, says Pam. In Asia you can live comfortably for less than $1,000 a month on a powder-sand beach in Thailand. Up the budget just a bit and you can afford First-World comforts and conveniences in colonial Penang Island, Malaysia. Keith Hockton and his wife Lisa live there, where they rent a sea-view apartment for $1,000 a month it comes with a shared pool and gym and they eat out five nights a week, keep a small sailboat, enjoy cycling through the botanic gardens. Their total budget is $1,719 a month. In Brazil, expats with $2,150 a month can live a block from the countrys best beaches in Fortaleza. In Boquete, Panama, Karl and Liz Parker need just $2,000 a month to fund their life in a place that provides lavish highland views in a near-perfect climate. Panamas retiree-benefit program provides them discounts on nearly everything, too, which helps keep their costs down. In Cuenca, Ecuador, Douglas Willis, his wife and two children live on just $1,000 a month. In Costa Ricas Central Valley, Sharon and Lee Harris bought a townhouse in Heredia for $75,000, and pay only $40 a month for healthcare coverage as members of the Caja, the countrys excellent national healthcare system. Wherever the locale theyve chosen beach, city, highland, valley these expats all have one thing in common: Theyre living the lives theyve always wanted for much less than they ever dreamt they could. This 2012 Retirement Index covers all the bases, revealing a wealth of choices when it comes to comfortable retirement living abroad. Choices you dont have The International Living Team for The Daily Reckoning Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Tatarewicz (#0)
But which of these places will welcome me AND my guns? :)
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Amen. There's the rub. Break the Conventions - Keep the Commandments - G.K.Chesterson It is doubtful any of them would, at least not until and unless you jump through whatever hoops you have to to become a citizen of that country. And some of them probably don't allow private citizens to own guns at all (just a guess). Liberty is not a means to a higher political end. It is itself the highest political end. Lord Acton The human herd stampedes on the fields of facts and the valleys of truth to get to the desert of ignorance. Saman Mohammadi "If a politician found he had cannibals among his constituents, he would promise them missionaries for dinner." Mencken "..if the military is going to defend our freedoms, then we need freedoms to defend. Our freedoms must be restored before the military can defend them..." Lawrence M. Vance Você me trata desse jeito só porque eu sou preto. Junior (my youngest son)
Honduras. You will need to be pursuing citizenship, but that is not really a big issue. Then a permit. There are relatively few "police" in Honduras, there is the Policia Nacional, and some "metro", traffic cops, but I've only seen one incident of "traffic enforcement", and the cabbie really worked hard to get stopped. Businesses are protected by hired security, mostly prior military. Personal protection is up to the individual. Luke The Spook Southeast Asian Wargames, Participant '65-'66 The IQ and the life expectancy of the average American recently passed each other in opposite directions. - George Carlin
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None to few. It's not as bad as you might think in some of those places. Usually it's better to buy the guns there and the dealer can help get or provide any necessary permits. Let's look at a few of them Belize - Best described as a buggy swamp populated by incorrigible Negroes, legal gun ownership is very difficult, even though home invasions of expats are common. Brazil - Again difficult but small caliber pistols .32 and under and 20ga shotguns can be had legally, with some hoops to jump. France - Yep, you can own guns in France but be prepared to jump "le hoop" Panama - not sure Ecuador - One of the best places in Latin America. When you by a pistol it comes with a CCW, recent law changes make owning semi auto rifles legal, locally produced guns can be bought like toasters, imported guns are pricey but available. Also note, In Ecuador you have the right to defend yourself with a gun in home invasions or robberies and stuff like that. Aisian countries - I don't have a clue Probably the best country in South America for gun ownership is Argentina. The last time I was there you could buy 9mm submachine guns for $200. You do need a permit but there the permits are issued by the military not the police and are easy to get and were $40 good for 3 or 4 years. Note you'll need a different permit for each type (not each weapon)of weapon you want to own and another permit if you want to reload.
Ozarks.
Serial killer psychopaths ruin families. Corporate psychopaths ruin societies -- Prof. Robert Hare
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