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<blockquote data-quote="vantexan" data-source="post: 883200" data-attributes="member: 24302"><p>Actually the Mexican gov't has a social insurance plan that costs very little that meets most medical needs of it's citizens. You'll have to sit in line with alot of other people, but even expats are allowed to buy into it. India is definitely a major medical tourism center but anywhere there are excellent medical facilities at reasonable prices has seen growth. Thailand is a big center. Guatemala City has become popular. Costa Rica too. But back to Mexico. Walmart, Sam's Club, Costco, Home Depot, and many more companies are all over Mexico now. Pretty much all our fast food restaurants are there. Mexico has built many new toll highways comparable to our interstates that make it possible to travel quickly around the country. There are multiplex theaters playing American movies in English with Spanish subtitles in all the bigger cities and many smaller cities. That includes American owned Cinemark theaters. Sirius satellite radio works all the way to Guatemala. And Shaw Satellite out of Canada covers the country and they have all the American channels. There are plenty of places where a single guy can get along fine on less than $800 a month and a couple with $2000 a month retirement income can be very comfortable. It's not perfect, but hundreds of thousands of Americans live in Mexico, tens of thousands more live in just about every other Latin American country, especially Costa Rica and Panama. Depending on where you live you can reduce your living costs by 50 to 75%. That's an investment anyone can come out ahead on.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="vantexan, post: 883200, member: 24302"] Actually the Mexican gov't has a social insurance plan that costs very little that meets most medical needs of it's citizens. You'll have to sit in line with alot of other people, but even expats are allowed to buy into it. India is definitely a major medical tourism center but anywhere there are excellent medical facilities at reasonable prices has seen growth. Thailand is a big center. Guatemala City has become popular. Costa Rica too. But back to Mexico. Walmart, Sam's Club, Costco, Home Depot, and many more companies are all over Mexico now. Pretty much all our fast food restaurants are there. Mexico has built many new toll highways comparable to our interstates that make it possible to travel quickly around the country. There are multiplex theaters playing American movies in English with Spanish subtitles in all the bigger cities and many smaller cities. That includes American owned Cinemark theaters. Sirius satellite radio works all the way to Guatemala. And Shaw Satellite out of Canada covers the country and they have all the American channels. There are plenty of places where a single guy can get along fine on less than $800 a month and a couple with $2000 a month retirement income can be very comfortable. It's not perfect, but hundreds of thousands of Americans live in Mexico, tens of thousands more live in just about every other Latin American country, especially Costa Rica and Panama. Depending on where you live you can reduce your living costs by 50 to 75%. That's an investment anyone can come out ahead on. [/QUOTE]
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