From Hanoi To Huai Hom
May 3, 2009
Panama City, Panama
PLUS: Best Beaches In The Caribbean (And Why Right Now Is The
Time To Buy Them)...Best Retirement Deal In The Americas...Rent Overseas
Tips From A Pro...How To Ensure Yourself Enough Money In Retirement, No
Matter What Happens...
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The World's Top 18 Overseas Havens:
- Argentina...from cosmopolitan Buenos Aires to
Mendoza wine country...
- Belize...one of the easiest places in the world to
get foreign residency...plus some of the best diving on earth...
- China...yes, China...perhaps the cheapest place on
earth to think about becoming a foreign retiree...
- Croatia...the Mediterranean like it used to be...
- Dominican Republic...our editor Rebecca Tyre has
just returned from a scouting trip and couldn't be more bullish on this
beautiful Caribbean island fringed with miles of white sand...
- Ecuador...most affordable retirement haven in the
Americas...
- France...world's best health care...world's most
beautiful city...and more affordable than you might think, especially in
the secret "other" South of France...
- Hong Kong...bustling international and expatriate
enclave...
- India...cheap, cheap, cheap...and, in some parts,
beautiful...
- Ireland...perhaps the world's most welcoming
nation, right now in crisis...meaning this country makes more sense from
a cost of living point of view than it has in a decade...
- Italy...your dream of la dolce vita could
be more affordable than you think...
- Malaysia...My Second Home program welcomes foreign
retirees...
- Mexico...most accessible choice for Americans...in
some cases, only a drive away...
- Nicaragua...long and glorious Pacific
coastline...plus colonial Granada, the most romantic city in the
Americas...
- Panama...the world's #1 retirement, offshore, and
business haven...with still-emerging pockets of opportunity for real
estate investment...
- Philippines...working to make itself the most
foreign retiree-friendly country in Asia...
- Thailand...super-affordable and exotic...
- Uruguay...safe and stable with a low, low cost of
living...
Which one is right for you?
More than 20 experts and expats are convening in Panama City next month to
help you find an answer to that question.
Here's what you need to know:
What: How To Retire Overseas Conference
When: May 12-13, 2009
Where: Veneto Casino & Hotel, Panama City, Panama
Here's what you need to do right now:
Contact Conference Director Stephanie Valencia right away.
Six places remain as of this writing.
Reach Stephanie by e-mail at
SValencia@LiveandInvestOverseas.com or by phone at 1-888-627-8834.
Full program details here.
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Dear Overseas Opportunity Letter Reader,
Our correspondents have taken you around the globe this week...
-- Our own Rebecca Tyre, reporting from the Dominican Republic,
writes: "I knew that the Dominican Republic has great beaches and that, as a
result, it attracts big volumes of tourists every year. I knew many people
who had traveled to Punta Cana or La Romana to spend a week at an
all-inclusive resort, but I'd never met anyone who had chosen to become a DR
expat.
"Based on that limited experience, I came to the misguided conclusion that
the Dominican Republic is a great vacation spot...but not a place to
consider for the longer term.
"I've just returned from the island, and, I have to tell you, my initial
assumptions were all wrong.
"Yes, there were thousands of tourists and incredibly beautiful beaches, but
the
Dominican Republic has so much more to offer..."
-- New Correspondent Wendy Justice shows you daily life in Vietnam,
where she lived for three months: "Hanoi is a vibrant city of more than
three million, the cultural and spiritual heart of Vietnam.
"Less influenced by the west than Ho Chi Minh City, her brazen sister to the
south, this modern city has retained its traditional roots, with small,
family-owned businesses instead of fast-food chains, mega-supermarkets, and
international department stores.
"Hanoi has a character rarely seen in modern Asian cities. It boasts
beautiful examples of French colonial architecture, trees on every street,
and busy cafes and shops spilling onto the sidewalks.
"Your
first and lasting impression of Hanoi is of its energy..."
-- Wendy also introduces you to the attractions of northern Thailand:
"Huai Hom is comprised almost entirely of wooden huts supported by stilts
and emerges from the highland jungle approximately 20 miles from the bigger
town of Mae Sariang. It differs from some of the nearby settlements, as
almost every house here has electricity and many homes even have running
water.
"The relative prosperity of this village is easy to understand. Every front
yard contains a tarp filled with newly picked coffee beans, drying in the
sunlight. Most homes have coffee mills, and the hills in the region, about
60 miles east of the Myanmar border, are
dotted with small groves of coffee trees..."
-- Correspondent Susan Vial reports from South Africa:
"Tourism is the fastest-growing industry in South Africa for a reason. The
quality of life in South Africa is fantastic. We have excellent
infrastructure. We have beautiful homes and are able to afford staff to help
take care of them. We have world-class amenities, such as shopping malls,
theaters, sporting facilities (SA is host to the World Cup in 2010),
restaurants...
"In addition, we have something you won't find on any other continent:
Africa's unique wildlife. The many game parks, with their diversity of
accommodation, from basic, rustic, up-close, and personal tented bush camps
to super-refined five-star lodges,
offer something available nowhere else in the world..."
-- Latin America Correspondent Christian MacDonald files his in-depth report
on expat retirement living in Cuenca, Ecuador,
which will be featured in the next issue of the
Overseas Retirement Letter (due out May 15). As Christian explains:
"When you consider all that Cuenca has to offer--and what it costs to live
here--you'll agree that there's no better deal out there. All it took was
one visit for me, and I was hooked. Plan a trip, have a look, and get ready
for an exciting life in the Andes."
Christian's
budget for monthly costs in Cuenca is detailed on our website. This
shows that you could live comfortably on US$1,240 a month, including rent.
(Note that a revised and updated monthly budget will be featured in
Christian's April 15 ORL report.)
What's next? Parts II and III of Rebecca Tyre's Dominican Republic
report...Wendy Justice from Bali...Michael Paladin from Granada,
Nicaragua...
And much, much more.
Happy Sunday,
Kathleen Peddicord
P.S. Also this week:
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