Ever dream of leaving it all behind and heading out of America?
You’re not the only one. A new study shows that more US citizens than
ever before are living outside of the country.
According to statistics from the US State Department, around 6.4
million Americans are either working or studying overseas, which Gallup
says is the largest number ever for such statistic.
The polling
organization came across the number after conducting surveys in 135
outside nations and the information behind the numbers reveal that this
isn’t exactly a longtime coming either — numbers have skyrocketed only
in recent years. In the 24 months before polling began, the number of
Americans between the ages of 25 and 34 living abroad managed to surge
from barely 1 percent to over 5.1 percent. For those under the age span
wishing to move overseas, the percentage has jumped in the same amount
of time from 15 percent to 40.
While the United States of America
was at one point (and largely still is) a magnet for foreigners in
search of work, the statistics makes it clear that an opposite trend is
quickly picking up steam.
"There's a feeling among more
entrepreneurial Americans that if you really want to get anything done,
you have to get out of country and away from the depressing atmosphere," Bob Adams of America Wave tells Reuters. “There's a sense of lost direction, so more people are looking for locations that offer more hope about the future."
Many
of those leaving the US have job skills that would transfer quite well
in the American market. Instead, however, they chose to bring those out
of the States, attracted instead to opportunities elsewhere.
While
America offers some employment opportunities unmatched outside of the
United States, the country has also seen dire economic statistics since
the dawn of the Obama administration, with jobless benefit claims
soaring in recent months, and only last week did the Department of Labor
reveal an unemployment statistic below 9 percent. On the contrary, the
number of Americans that want full-time work and have given up on
finding it or unable to locate it is closer to double that figure, while
at the same time many of America’s largest employers have outsourced
positions across the globe. Banking giant Goldman Sachs announced
earlier this year that in the wake of a recession, they would finally be
creating 1,000 new positions, yet making them available only to workers
in Singapore. Other industries, significantly American, have been
relocated as well; the ending of NASA’s space shuttle program this year
left many intelligent US citizens with little choice but to continue in
their field outside of the States.
“We’ve pretty much outsourced everything else,”
aerospace technician Giovanni Pinzon tells RT. He was left scrambling
for a job after years working in America’s space program.
America
Wave’s Adams adds to Reuters that the statistics prove surprising to
him, but noted that it doesn’t exactly make sense to think that it is a
fluke.
“They're looking for work because of the sluggish economy, and they've lost confidence that the U.S. is going anywhere,” says Adams.
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