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Retiring in France with a dollar income? |
We are thinking of moving to France in a couple of years. We will be retired with an income between $80k - $100K per year, but are concerned about the strong euro versus the dollar. since transferring two million would result in a loss of about half a million, switching to euro-denominated investments may not be a viable solution. Can anybody offer any advice, suggestions, comments about cost of living comparisons of the feasibility of this plan? I might add that I am somewhat familiar with costs in France, since we go there once or twice a year. Still, staying in hotels and eating in restaurants is different from living there. I suppose my question deals more cost of living, such as how much of a sacrifice would it be to live on 60,000 euros per year as opposed to 80,000 dollars, and also advice on how to achieve the best use of my investment capital, i.e., keep it in dollars or move it into euros. Well, in the first place your aren't actually losing anything at all by moving from dollar to euro denominated investments any more than you'd gain something by moving from dollars to pesos. Currency is, in the final analysis just a fungible commodity like any other. Hm, well, as a new yorker, i have to say that if you think living in NYC was expensive- brace yourself for France. I went to Paris just a week ago, and the euro makes it very expensive to live there. Consider the Croatian coast or Slovenia instead of France. (or any other country in western Europe). Your income will go much farther and both are great places. Good thing you have money. The poorer parts are very dangerous. |
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| Bavaria Baden-Wuerttemburg General - France lle-de-France Rhone-Alpes Provence-Alpes-Cote d`Azur Paris Normandie Nord-Pas-de-Calais Languedoc-Roussillon Bretagne Aquitaine |
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