Wages in general are much better in the US. But then expenses also tend to be higher, not only health, even the tipping gets crazy expensive. But in the end it's very personal, what makes you happy? Is it money? Being close to family? Being in your own country? For most people the move would be too troublesome to be worth it, I guess.
Citizenship is easy to get once you already live in the country, not just Portugal, Luxembourg is probably easier even, the language requirement is a low level of Luxembourgish. Of course for that you first need residency. In Portugal is again easy, as long as you have a job contract, Portugal has probably the most liberal migration laws in the EU right now (yeah, wages are low).
Portugal nationality for non-residents is easy as long as you can prove a family connection, that can be a Portuguese granparent or Portuguese Jewish roots (they can be 5 centuries old, is a compensation for inquisition, but you must be able to prove it, a Portuguese Jewish surname helps).
Instead of wasting millions in programs trying to convince people to go back to the countryside, which most don't want.. this is what shoud be done, rewild, give it back to nature.
Moving abroad is always challenging and not for everyone, some people can't adapt to a different way of life.
The EU has obviously an interest in getting the UK back in some shape. But I would say that nobody is in a hurry right now. The UK needs to sort itself out, decide what it wants and be consequent and solid about it. There are currently many discussions on the shape and reform of the EU and more people defend the idea of different levels of integration available. From a true federation with single currency in its core, to contries with free border, free movement, common market, but own currency and non-federated. That second tier could be ideal for countries like the UK and Ukraine, at least in the foreseable future.
So it was a bad idea to invest in a terrorist oligarchy? Who could have guessed!? I hope the states will help those poor investors.. not.
Personally I'm glad that at least in some European countries it is NOT a crime to desecrate "holy" things.
The motivation might be different but the result is the same, facilitating the Russian regime financial moves.
The original article by Economist has a paywall, that's why I posted that one instead, but here's the link: https://www.economist.com/europe/2023/07/03/-vladimir-putins-useful-idiots
Considering that the EPP might get a full majority with the far right in the next European election I don't think this is good news. For the ones complaining about von der Leyen just look to the rest of EPP, Manfred Webber for starts, everyone looks so much worse... better to keep Ursula.
there was a reduction on the total number after brexit, so this is an easy way to reflect demographic changes without reducing representativity to any country
It's not just Americans. Can't we find a European source that describes this is in a complete and EU POV?