I come from a country that doesn't have the best living standard in the
world but it definitely isn't that bad to live in. While paychecks are
lower for more then half of what you get in Denmark, you can get by if
you are just moderately careful with money. Main difference that I can
notice in spending is mostly on fluff stuff. You still have plenty of
money to buy and have everything you need to live a normal life like:
place to live, food and other basic necessities. What you will lack after
you pay all that is for other things. You will have less to spend money
on things you do not need, like candy, rice cookers, carrot peeler,
newest versions of smartphones etc. As an acquaintance from the Croatian ghetto said : "We have everything the Danes have, the main difference is
that in Croatia it will take you 3 paychecks to buy new iPhone and in
Denmark 1/3 of the paycheck." After living in Denmark for some time I
started wondering are there any detrimental sideffects of high living
standard? I think there are.
Higher living standard entails greater buying power and greater buying power leads to couple of not so great consequences.
First
one is that you can pay your way out of a lot of things. Often
people will choose to pay for some things rather then do it themselves. Even though they are perfectly capable of doing it and they have the
time to do it but they have money so they can pay to somebody else to do
it instead of them. While that on it's own doesn't sound bad, but it
can lead to complete incompetence in executing some everyday tasks that I
would never even consider outsourcing to somebody else, like cleaning
the apartment or painting the walls or cooking.
I
think this is one bad consequence of living in a first world country.
The excess of money basically leads to people going into a very narrow
specializations in life that makes them very depended on others in
every single aspect of their lives. Literary for everything other then
what they do for a living, they kinda become idiot savants that are
great at what they are doing but can't do anything else.
Second
bad consequence of having too much money is that people just become too
trigger happy at spending it. It seems to me that is one
of the causes of an obesity epidemic running wild in Denmark. If you
have much more money that you need and you like munching candy and
chugging down sodas, there is nothing to stop you from doing that,
because you don't need to think if you are going to have enough or not.
So you can just stuff your face with it all you want, so latter you can
start crying how you have gotten fat and spend money on gyms, spinners, dieticians, slimming food supplements, healthy food, personal trainers
etc. But none of that helps anymore 'cause you can't control yourself
anymore but it doesn't matter anyways you have more than enough so why
not?
Third bad
consequence of too much buying power is excess! And you can see it
everywhere. Articles that are on offering in the normal stores, number
of stores like Offertisima or Pepco that sell useless shit that no one
needs, number and type of a wide variety of different hobby stores which
are obviously thriving. You can also tell about excess in peoples needs
and wants. In stuff that are considered necessary for normal everyday
life (cheese cutters, potato peelers, rice cookers etc), having a pot
and a knife just doesn't cut it anymore.
You
can also see it in the people criteria for the adequate size of the
living space. Newest example that I saw was when we visited a friend. He
just moved in to a new house with his girlfriend. The house is huge:
two bathrooms, 3 bedrooms, one huge living room plus kitchen. That is a
house for 4 people but not more! I grew up with my parents in a 30
square meters apartment with one room, kitchen, bathroom and hallway.
While I was a kid it was ok but in this apartment you could have 4
children and parents.
I
must say that after I moved here I see what does it mean to live above
the level of what is actually needed. I think that people could live
with much less and be happy, but consumerism and modern economy is
taking it's toll and there is no way back which may not be the best
thing in the long run but that is a topic for another entry.
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