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The quality of a life abroad

Perhaps more than other residents of a country Expats are acutely aware of the quality of life offered by their surroundings. Moving constantly from place to place, comparisons are naturally made, not just between home and the current country of residence but between several countries ‘abroad’. Unlike a two-week holiday on the beach when we say I would love to just move here, an expat’s decision to move is normally based on professional criteria.

Often we are posted somewhere that might not perhaps be first or even second choice. Expatica covers Belgium, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Spain and Switzerland. And so we decided to ask a series of questions, designed to find out what international professionals think of their surroundings and how they measure their quality of life in general. Liveability and well-being were combined in a survey that went to the very heart of what it’s like to be an exile.

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How happy are we?

The tiny Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan long ago dispensed with the notion of Gross National Product as a gauge of well-being. The king decreed that his people would aspire to Gross National Happiness instead.

Food in the Netherlands

One of the biggest complaints I hear from fellow expats is that food in The Netherlands leaves a lot to be desired.

The root of happiness

In 2003, BBC World Service broadcast an interview with a professor from the University of Michigan who had devised a method of measuring happiness. Previous life satisfaction surveys tended to link circumstances such as income and marital status to feelings of well-being but the outcomes left the researchers with two major question marks. The first was the very small effect of circumstance on life satisfaction.

Does the Netherlands meet your expectations?

Time of the year, runny nose, headache, fever... Sitting across from the GP, the doctor coldly tells you that he will not give you a prescription simply because "it's not done here". Leaving the clinic, you see a native Dutchman lifting his eyebrows and saying something nasty about an "allochtoon". It leaves you with a creepy feeling - just what is your status here as a foreigner.

Intercultural relations in Holland

In Portugal I was working for the Prosecution service as a translator (legal court documents mainly). Basically I have the same job here at Eurojust. I came to the Netherlands on special leave, so it was a pretty safe way to go abroad.
Mail and win

e-travel (book and relax)

Dinner & Theatre in London
Dinner & Theatre in London
Enjoy 3 days and 2 nights, including a 3 star hotel, centrally located, within walking distance of many of London’s major attractions (including breakfast, based on double occupancy).
 
NYC, Fly, See, Buy
NYC, Fly, See, Buy
Enjoy 4 days and 3 nights in NYC, sightseeing and shopping. Including a 3 star hotel, centrally located within walking distance of many of New York’s major attractions (based on double occupancy). Including round trip airfare on Continental or KLM and airport transfers.
 
Health and Wellness Getaway, in Morocco at CLUB MED, Marrakech, La Palmeraie
Health and Wellness Getaway, in Morocco at CLUB MED, Marrakech, La Palmeraie
Round trip airfare from Amsterdam and all transfers, Meals and beverages, golf, mountain biking, tennis, fitness lessons bridge lessons, cooking lessons, entertainment and shows.