I really don't find a single country has escaped completely unscathed.
One word: Canada. Ok, maybe not completely unscathed, but expanding, even booming in a time when others were collapsing. Canada has been in an economic boom the past few years, we weren't reallly even affected. Our dollar has been on par or above USD for the past 5 years, it recently slipped to below par a few days ago and there was panic in the country, and only now are the banks getting worried about people taking on too much personal debt load. However, Alberta is still booming. They are desperate. Pipelines are already at capacity and they need to build more and now. My husband works in Oil & Gas. He has his Canadian permanent residency. Any logic would tell you this is the place we should go.
The people know are my friends here, or at least people I trust and respect and vice versa and don't start trying to give me a wake up call scare tactic by throwing prices at me in pesos about the horrors of childcare because I evidently must be that naive know better! If anything, they "get it" and can empathize better than people (locals or expats alike) who only recognize a Yanqui accent and presume that I'm in for a nasty shock one day because I evidently am enjoying a privileged lifestyle here that means I've been living here more than 4 years and haven't taken notice that Argentina in 2009 doesn't resemble Argentina in 2013.
Ok so Lauren, obviously I made the mistake of pissing off a pregnant woman on a hot day. And by your definition we could not be friends. Obviously you don't trust me.
A shame, because frankly you ARE me with a few years lag. American educated, Masters' degree holding North Americans with our Argentine husbands and our first borns. You live in a similar barrio, sounds like you have a similar lifestyle. And I'm sure our similarities do not end there somehow. But you know, forget all that because I dared talk about the prices in pesos of childcare.
I wasn't really posting anything to you as ADVICE. I was accounting my experience. Advice would have been This is how it is, this is what to do. The only advice I can really derive from my post that I gave to you was to start budgeting for your child's daycare now -- and you took offense to this. You took offense to someone giving you the head's up on the cost of daycare. Do you realise how ridiculous that seems? I too hated hearing the costs (especially back home) because I didn't really want to start thinking about that. But I didn't take offense when someone told me!
I told you what I was experiencing and told you that since having the baby and realising the forthcoming expenses on flights home are just a few months around the corner I've decided this is not the place for me and my family in the longterm.
Did I advise you to pack your bags and get on a plane? No. Did I advise you to get out. No.
All I said was that I too once viewed staying here as a choice, and now after having kids I've realised that what was once a personal choice for me alone has come to involve many other lives -- my child's, his grandparents, his aunts and uncles, his cousins -- here, in Canada, and in Spain where the other half of our Argentine family live. On a pesos income that means 2/3 of our family is becoming inaccessible.
Interpret what you will from my posts. I do have coming on 8 years here and usually experience counts for something. I'm not trying to offend, I'm just informing. A lot of people won't like that information, that's fine. But as you continue to say, you're posting your personal experience, while I am posting mine. So no need to get offended when I post that daycare is going to be an additional cost out of pocket*.
(*unless you are lucky enough to have grandparents on board with helping)