I think you're conflating the wealth of the nation and the wealth of individuals. Saying that if you really want to go to France it's possible, you just need to sell or abandon your belongings, walk away from your debt, abandon your family and travel by steerage on a cargo ship to get to France and live illegally because you don't qualify for any type of long term residency and you also can no longer return home because you'll be homeless and left to die in the street is... Unrealistic.A very significant number of Americans simply do not have the resources to fail at something like that.
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Most of the country is not New York, and transportation is more expensive. Basing travel costs off of the cost at a major transit hub isn't representative.
France requires you to file your visa applications before travel. If you show up on a travel visa and then apply for long term residency they'll reject it because you didn't follow the rules.A residency visa requires €1400 a month in income, so good luck getting residency with €1000 cash. Particularly when a significant portion of Americans don't have that to begin with.
No one said you had to be rich to leave America and move to France, just that it's not available to most Americans.
Says the person who is obviously not American.https://www.norc.org/research/library/most-working-americans-would-face-economic-hardship-if-they-miss.html Remember that we don't have a social safety system here like most countries do. Being unemployed means you don't get medical treatment , and even if you're employed the costs can be devastating in their own right. You can end up homeless, where housing assistance can have a wait list of more than a year, if it even exists. Same for food assistance. The only medical care you're entitled to is that the ER must do the minimum necessary to stabilize a life threatening condition.That's what's looming over Americans when we weigh taking financial risks. Loosing a month of income can create an unrecoverable financial burden.
That's what I mean when I say most Americans can't afford to fail at something like that. They may be able to afford to do it, and it might work out, but if it doesn't the consequences are crippling.
How often do you see an elderly person in a wheelchair with an oxygen tank doing menial labor at a supermarket or hardware store?