02/12/10
From CNN
Why France is best place to live in the world
By Daniela Deane for CNN
London, England (CNN) -- Bindi Dupouy, an Australian living in Paris, and her
French husband, just had their first child, a son born in the country.
Dupouy, a 28-year-old lawyer, got almost five months paid maternity leave from
her company for the birth. She can take another seven months off beyond that --
a year total -- unpaid, if she wants, with her job guaranteed under French law.
When her son Louis was born, healthy and by way of a normal delivery, she got to
stay in her local French hospital, around the corner from where she lives, for
five full days, to rest.
Welcome to France, voted the best place in the world to live for the fifth year
in a row by International Living magazine, which has been analyzing data and
publishing its annual Quality of Life Index for 30 years.
One of the reasons France keeps winning the ranking is its world-class health
care system, which Dupouy just experienced first-hand.
"They treat expecting mums like treasures here," Dupouy told CNN from her Paris
apartment. "They take really good care of you. The health care system is just
amazing." She said she wouldn't have gotten the same maternity leave -- or care
-- back home in Australia.
At her job, Dupouy also gets seven weeks paid vacation a year, although it's her
first job as an attorney since graduating with a law degree in Australia. She
doesn't think twice about taking the Metro across town -- for just $1.37 a ride
-- to visit a friend. Or she picks up a rental bike at one of the many
computerized bike hire racks in town to get around.
France scores high marks across the board in the survey, which is done every
January, from health care (100 points) to infrastructure (92 points) to safety
and risk (100 points).
"No surprise," said the magazine in its report. "Its (France's) tiresome
bureaucracy and high taxes are outweighed by an unsurpassable quality of life,
including the world's best health care."
"The bread, the cheese, the wine," Dan Prescher, special projects editor at the
magazine, told CNN, when asked why France just keeps on winning year after year.
"That weighs pretty heavily in quality of life."
Prescher admitted the magazine had an "American bias" since the vast majority of
its subscribers are Americans spending in U.S. dollars. "France is one of those
golden places in the American consciousness," he said.
The annual index ranks 194 countries and comprises nine categories: Cost of
Living, Culture and Leisure, Economy, Environment, Freedom, Health,
Infrastructure, Safety and Risk and Climate. The Index analyzes data from
several official sources, including government web sites, the World Health
Organization, and several media sources.
Following France in the top ten are Australia, Switzerland, Germany, New
Zealand, Luxembourg, the U.S., Belgium, Canada and Italy, in that order.
"France always nets high scores in most categories," the magazine said. "But you
don't need number-crunchers to tell you its 'bon vivant' lifestyle is special.
It's impossible to enumerate the joy of lingering for hours over dinner and a
bottle of red wine in a Parisian brasserie. Or strolling beside the Seine on a
spring morning, poking through the book vendors' wares."
Other European countries slipped a little in the magazine's rankings this year,
with the exception of France and Germany. Britain dropped to 25th place from
last year's ranking of 20.
Variety is also seen as a major factor in France's appeal, with the survey
noting that "romantic Paris offers the best of everything, but services don't
fall away in Alsace's wine villages, in wild and lovely Corsica, in
lavender-scented Provence."
The United States dropped from third to seventh place in this year's rankings,
largely because of the grinding economic crisis last year. "Sustaining the
American dream has escalated out of the reach of many," the magazine said.
"The depression hit the United States and Great Britain hard," Prescher told
CNN. "That weighs down the ratings."
Of course, France too has its problems. The country suffers from high youth
unemployment, particularly among the disaffected young people who live in its
equivalent of the projects, known as lesbanlieues.
Late last year, the French government opened a national discussion about
national identity, which has evolved into debates over whether immigrants, and
particularly Muslim immigrants, are French enough. The country has the highest
Muslim population of any European country, with an estimated six million living
in the country.
But for the most part, French people enjoy a good lifestyle. International
Living says that during their large chunk of leisure time, the French enjoy
visiting the country's many beaches and Alpine ski resorts.
Dupouy -- like more famous expats Ernest Hemingway and Julia Child before her --
agrees.
She and her husband vacation every year at the seaside near Bordeaux, in the
southwest corner of France, where her husband's family has a home. They also go
skiing in the Alps during the winter.
She says that even if she and her husband decide to leave France for awhile
during their lives, they'll always come back -- every year, probably.
"The culture, the food, the family, it's all just really nice here," said Dupouy.
* * * * *
This article should be given the widest possible dissemination in the U.S. It could help to encourage the non-working classes (the over-educated, self-appointed, liberal intelligentsia and the under-educated, welfare surfers) as well as idealistic liberals in general, to migrate to La Belle France. If we could also convince the UN to relocate to its appropriate home in Paris, that would be purely outstanding.
This is a win-win situation, sending all of our useless Americans to France would immediately improve the culture of both countries.
I just hope the French don't mind making le telefon calls and hearing a little voice say "pressez 'une' pour Francais".
