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by Aerroon 1942 days ago
I think it's much more about expectations. People from poorer countries have much lower "needs". They live in smaller homes, use worse electronics, use older cars etc. They expect less, so their needs are lower. Once they become richer their needs will grow too.
3 comments

I don't think so, it's about relative cost. Everything is so much more expensive in richer countries, but comparatively speaking, cars, TVs, phones are much cheaper.

Like a phone is £20, but a weekly shop for a family might be £100. A TV might be £250, but rent is £500.

So you can be in the paradoxical situation of being able to afford to buy a phone or a TV one month, then next month run out of money for food or rent.

Expectations are definitely a big part of it. As someone who lives in the third world, (and only spends about one/two weeks a year in the first world), it always amazes me the minor (from my perspective) stuff that make some people in the first world really irritated.

Some that I can remember:

- Someone completely mad at their phone because the video on a call was dropping (just after landing, while the plane was still taxing, in the middle of the tarmac of a very large airport).

- The airbnb-mate in a shared Airbnb crying because the outside of the entrance of the house smelled a bit of cigarettes. I mean like real telenovela ending style tears.

- Someone kicking and shouting at a ticket vending machine because it was out of service (a working one was next to that one)

- Complaining about food choice in an event buffett that had like five different cuisines.

Fortunately my needs haven't grown that much, it seems that the only first world thing I want is a Japanese toilet.

As someone who lives in the first world, I share your amazement.
It's difficult to change habits. What if the needs don't grow, what do?