Produsele de pe acest site sunt achizitionate din Romania si livrate direct la usa destinatarului. Pentru convenienta dumneavoastra, pe aceasta pagina veti gasi comparatii intre costul vietii din Romania si alte tari din Europa, precum si comparatii intre Europa si USA.
Dupa observatiile reporterului Adrian Ardelean de la postul de radio Europa FM, preturile produselor alimentare din Berlin, Germania, sunt comparabile iar unele chiar mai mari decat in marketurile romanesti: "In Germania, unele dintre produsele alimentare consumate zi de zi au preturi comparabile cu cele din Romania..."
Iar asta in conditiile in care salariul minim este, la Berlin, de 10 ori mai mare decat la Bucuresti. Aici puteti ascuta relatarea reporterului:
Elena Tudor de la EuropaFM a stat de vorba cu familia Munteanu - Adrian, Otilia si fiica lor, Malina in leguatura cu comparatia preturilor de alimente din Romania si tara vecina, Ungaria.
Ei spun ca lunar, cheltuiesc pe alimente aproximativ 50.000 de forinti, adica aproape 700 de lei - mult mai putin decat ar fi cheltuit in Romania. Diferentele cele mai mari se vad la preturile la carne: in unele cazuri, preturile din Ungaria sunt la jumatatea celor din Romania. Aici puteti ascuta relatarea reporterului:
The high cost of living in Europe's cities - Sep 7th 2008
(from The Economist Intelligence) Unit ViewsWire
Western Europe is the most expensive place in the world to live, according to the Economist Intelligence Unit's latest annual Worldwide Cost of Living survey. Europe is home to eight of the 10 most expensive cities in the world, and 14 of the top 20.
Oslo, which remains in the top spot, is 32% more expensive than New York —the benchmark for all comparisons. Paris, Copenhagen and London have in the last year overtaken Tokyo and Osaka for the next three positions, and most other major EU cities have risen in the rankings over the previous year. The main reason for this has been the relative strength of the euro and sterling against the US dollar and the Yen, although many of the big European cities experienced lower year on year price rises in the EIU-selected basket of goods.
Europe's eastern cities also moved up the ranking, though they remain somewhat cheaper than their western counterparts. Moscow has the dubious distinction of being the most expensive in Eastern Europe, ranking 26th, and moving one place higher than New York, while St Petersburg now shares 44th place with Washington.
The cheapest EU capital is Sofia, ranking 111th out of the 132 cities covered, with a cost of living less than half of any of the top four metropolises. The highest-placed new EU member capitals are Prague, at 47th overtaking Lisbon, followed by Bucharest (52nd) and Budapest (72nd), which experienced the biggest slide, by 15 places, of any European city. This was mirrored by Belgrade's 15 place rise Europe's highest elevation putting both places at joint 72nd, at almost two-thirds of the cost of living of New York.