Jump to content

Why are you still here?


Pravda

Recommended Posts

2 hours ago, Beggar said:

The day might come when you are too old to get health insurance. That could mean that you will be forced to leave Thailand. 

As for me, I have already an insurance, for the rest of my life if I pay ( CFE, caisse des français de l'étranger ) ; no restriction on age, always the same price , whatever your age 

  • Sad 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Why do I stay here?

 

Simple answer because I like it here !... 

 

Longer answer: 

- Easy Long Term Visa (Thai Elite Visa for Life (joined TE early when that was an option)

- Married here, Wife's family are in Bkk so thats good for her to be close to them.

- Son is in a very good school here

- I don't have to pay tax here (work overseas on rotation - I'd have to pay significant amounts of tax if in the UK for more than 91 days a year).

- Transport is cheap (to go out and meet friends etc)

- Other expats here are more adventurous and like minded (in the UK, even close friends are less sociable)

- I have a lot of friends here (Thai and Western)

- Wife has a lot of friends here (Thai school and Uni friends)

- I have no medical insurance issues (have full health insurance)

 

 

Potential long term problems. 

- IF TE Visa becomes cancelled (unlikely)

- IF I can't get Medical Insurance above a certain age, or cost is prohibitively expensive

- IF I become dissatisfied with my Sons education (move back to the UK and put him in a good school there)

- IF the tax situation changes and I have to start paying Tax here even though I work overseas. 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well, working with no B-VISA during the probationary period? No, thank you.

 

Am now in Bangladesh. A country which may not even be on your radar. Friendly people, I like the food and no stomach problems yet despite eating street food. 

 

Some of you could live elsewhere most of the time. I love TH and want to visit frequently. But hell no to ever working there again.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 minutes ago, Jingthing said:

Thanks for your sincere post and yes, I can relate to that. Repatriation after a very long time is usually no piece of cake and can sometimes be traumatic even ruinous. In some cases people getting out of long prison terms are in a better place to cope than long gone expats. For example there are sometimes half way houses for such people. There are no such half way houses for reintegrating expats. Obviously the degree of difficulty depends on lots of specific personal circumstances. The typical advice is don't burn your bridges but for expats away for decades it's not always so much about burning them as having them slowly slip away.

A falang I knew returned to London a couple of years ago with health concerns after a few years living in Pattaya. He's a native born Londoner.

 

He was about 67. At one time a homeless person in the UK was considered vulnerable if over 60 and was given housing priority. That's history.

 

He was given the address of a hostel. (AKA Doss House) 

 

He'd be admitted at 8 pm and had to leave at 9 am. His days were spent in cafes, pubs and libraries. This was in the winter. He visited the hospital concerning his health and was told to come back in 10 days time.

 

He gave up and got a flight back to BKK and returned to his cheap lodging house in Pattaya. The last we knew he was still in Pattaya but no one has seen nor heard from him.

 

He could be dead for all we know. He had a drink problem.

  • Sad 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, yogi100 said:

I've not blamed Thailand nor anything else including Brexit for anything to do with its economy and neither have you read a single word that I've written in which I do.

 

It's obvious to anyone with eyes and ears that falangs are not as welcome as they were previously. There's evidence of this in posts all over this forum and all the other Thailand based forums.

 

I am not prepared to catalogue them all for you unless you are willing to pay me to do so. I have a Kasikorn Bank account in which you can deposit the necessary funds if you so wish.

You take my comment too individual and private. And you still did not tell why they had to or are beeing forced to leave?
 

4 hours ago, yogi100 said:

 

Businesses such as bars and restaurants are closing down all over town where falangs gather. Some people are trying to sell their condos, often in vain.

Of course they are closing down. That´s what happens when everybody think they can open the same place in the same place. ???? 
 

4 hours ago, yogi100 said:

 

A friend of mine recently got accused of working by an IO at the airport. She was extremely unpleasant about it and he only got in by the skin of his teeth after he phoned his hotel!

 

He had no warning of this reception when he paid out hundreds of £s for his flight from the UK. He's just a regular holiday maker who can afford several holidays a year and chooses to spend these holidays in Pattaya. On the subject of the economy what he spends goes into the local economy. If he stops coming it will not.

 

I'm also a holiday maker who regularly visits the LOS. I used to stay for 80 - 90 days at a time three or four times year. From next year the visa that allows me to do this will be withdrawn. If I stop coming I won't be spending my money in the LOS either.

All above will be a big loss for the Thai economy. Sounds to me thta you are one in the bunch, that has been mislead by the ones who talk too much. Simply living with the belief that all that are staying here are a big contribution to Thai economy. That´s just not true. We are an ink splash in the ball pen factory.
 

4 hours ago, yogi100 said:

 

I've got decent, honest ex pat chums who are going to have problems with the 800,000 baht issue. They may not be flash nor wealthy but are the sort of people anyone would be glad to have as a friend or a neighbour. And what they spend goes into the local Thai economy. Unless they leave for whatever reasons arise to necessitate their departure.

 

Get out and about and talk to people yourself about these things and you'll realise how the Land of Smiles is no longer the haven of welcoming cordiality it was once famous for.

You do not have to be rich to stay in Thailand. You do not have to put 800k locked in the Thai bank. The only thing needed is:

For retirement: 65k baht per month in regular transfers.
For marriage: 40k baht per month in regular transfers or income from work.

That is something that all people that even consider living in a foreign country at least must have.

  • Sad 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 10/10/2019 at 8:42 AM, robblok said:

I like it in this country and I don't think this country owns me anything. You chose to take care of your wife (or that guy did) Nobody forced you why would Thailand own you anything.

 

I already got health insurance seems like a logical thing to do in this country. Its because of people defaulting and flaunting the rules that things get harder yet you see people advocating for it all the time. 

 

The only thing i think is crazy is the 40k outpatient thing. 

40k outpatient is not the only crazy thing ... the other one is that it must be a Thai Insurance company, even if one has a better international insurance, but not accepted.

 

Things like this is what makes it so quirky. I guess most of us have insurances, no big issue or thing to debate, but you still have to be up to date to new regulations which keep coming, to keep compliant ... to often very silly rules which makes no sense.

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.








×
×
  • Create New...