Just read this article, best is Dubai and Zurich with 1% of their daily income, worst is Caracas taking a 9 hour shift
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How many hours does it take you to earn breakfast
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How many hours does it take you to earn breakfast
Just read this article, best is Dubai and Zurich with 1% of their daily income, worst is Caracas taking a 9 hour shiftretired in 2009 at the age of 39 with less than 300K total net worthTags: None
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How many hours does it take you to earn breakfastLast edited by disneysteve; 03-02-2017, 09:58 AM.Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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Originally posted by bjl584 View PostI had 6 eggs this morning.
Eggs were on sale at Aldi for 65 cents a dozen.
Breakfast this morning cost me 32.5 cents.
It took me 40 seconds or so to earn breakfast today.
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So what exactly happens somewhere like Caracas where this chart says breakfast costs more than a day's wages? That would mean that people couldn't afford to eat even one meal a day. Is everyone starving to death?Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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Originally posted by disneysteve View PostSo what exactly happens somewhere like Caracas where this chart says breakfast costs more than a day's wages? That would mean that people couldn't afford to eat even one meal a day. Is everyone starving to death?
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Originally posted by SavingMum View PostOr maybe the lower-earning classes can't afford the breakfast of the rich? I wouldn't mind a gourmet meal every day.... apart from the fact that I'd have to make itSteve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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breakfast is seriously the cheapest meal to make in terms of dollar cost if you cook yourself (of course there's the time component). Around here, businesses charge $5-8 for breakfast - 2 eggs, a starch, a meat. The cost to do it yourself is literally $0.50 or less.
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Originally posted by disneysteve View PostSo what exactly happens somewhere like Caracas where this chart says breakfast costs more than a day's wages? That would mean that people couldn't afford to eat even one meal a day. Is everyone starving to death?
Those people are likely eating plain starches for super cheap or eating food out of rich people's garbage. Those things are likely luxuries in some places around the world. Many people in the poorest nations eat literally anything that has caloric content. Bugs, rats, cats, dogs, scrounged fruits, whatever. And yes, some also do only eat 1 meal a day.Last edited by ~bs; 03-02-2017, 10:52 AM.
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Fresh foods like eggs, milk and fruit can be very hard to come by in some places. Curacao is also an island, so products from things that require space, like dairy cows and chickens are likely imported, raising the prices.
I'm sure the actual breakfast they eat just is very different and much cheaper than eggs and milk. It's an interesting infograph, but it doesn't reflect cost of living very effectively when it's using the same products everywhere.
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Originally posted by annibe11e View PostFresh foods like eggs, milk and fruit can be very hard to come by in some places. Curacao is also an island, so products from things that require space, like dairy cows and chickens are likely imported, raising the prices.
I'm sure the actual breakfast they eat just is very different and much cheaper than eggs and milk. It's an interesting infograph, but it doesn't reflect cost of living very effectively when it's using the same products everywhere.
As far as foods in general go, anything that is a meat or meat byproduct like eggs and milk tend to be more expensive and difficult to get than basic staples like rice or beans or whatever. This is because you need livestock (cows and chickens) to feed on grass or grain in large quantities to produce the meat or meat byproduct. In a poor country, those resources would go towards feeding people, not animals.
Meat’s large water footprint: why raising livestock and poultry for meat is so resource-intensive
Last edited by ~bs; 03-02-2017, 01:34 PM.
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