I’m being diagnosed for Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, which apparently has an average lifespan till 48 years old. I’d rather keep the extra income and enjoy the life while I’m alive, so I was wondering which countries don’t have mandatory pension contributions. I tried to look it up, but I couldn’t find any articles which just lists all countries on that basis. If anyone knows how to find it, I’d appreciate, but I’d also appreciate just a singular country example.

  • Comradesexual@lemmygrad.mlOP
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    7 months ago

    it also has universal heathcare, so it won’t allow people with serious health conditions to migrate to it

    Wait, they legit don’t allow people to migrate based on inborn conditions? How lovely…

    • livus@kbin.social
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      7 months ago

      No obese people allowed either.

      • New Zealanders collectively pay for everyone’s healthcare and everyone’s pension.

      • New Zealand has finite resources.

    • H4rdStyl3z@lemmy.ml
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      7 months ago

      It includes autism, which really enraged me when I found out. That’s one less country in this already progressively anti-immigration world… Well two, because Australia does the same wrt autistic people (and likely other health conditions).

        • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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          7 months ago

          Wow. I’m autistic myself and even I with my limited theory of mind can guess why this makes them mad: it affects them personally.

          It’s perfectly legit to find more salience in the issues that affect one’s own self directly.

        • H4rdStyl3z@lemmy.ml
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          7 months ago

          I found out about the autism because I am autistic and I was considering New Zealand as a potential country to migrate to until I found out about that. I also found out about the plethora of other conditions that bar you from immigration but it started with my personal search.

          I also wonder whether they measure the “burden on the healthcare system” in a fair or ableist/biased manner. Your link seems to suggest the former, but it also excludes ability to pay for private healthcare/insurance, which would preclude one from putting said burden on the public healthcare system and leaves the decision up to a medical professional, who may hold said biases, so…

          • livus@kbin.social
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            7 months ago

            Makes sense that you would encounter it if you were considering migrating.

            Re: insurance, New Zealand has universal healthcare and no-fault accident insurance, so creating a class of second class citizens who are not allowed access to it, would be cruel, especially if they ran out of money.

            On a practical level, as well as being hard to enforce, it wouldn’t work well. Universal free hospitals means the private health sector lacks capacity for some things, and has to refer people back to the public sector.

            It’s actually quite controversial policy. (Not in terms of people like OP because NZ health system is underfunded, so there’s no reason to want random strangers to come and freeload off the long-term taxpayers).

            But NZ occasionally get cases where non-citizen children of migrants get serious diseases and are denied permanent residency etc, and there’s usually an outcry and petitions etc.

            • H4rdStyl3z@lemmy.ml
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              7 months ago

              That does make sense. It is a country with a fairly small population, so I begrudgingly have to accept that it has to have some control over this kind of thing, not to overload its public systems.

              On the whole I think the concept of countries in general is bullshit but that’s a debate best had in another thread.

              The thing with the children of migrants being denied residency is truly heartbreaking. Do they become stateless as a result?

              • livus@kbin.social
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                7 months ago

                No, I’m pretty sure making people stateless is a crime under international law. Stateless people get to stay.

                Basically what happens is Immigration orders the deportation of the child back to their own country of origin, and their parents are free to go back with them. Sometimes it’s the other way round and an ill parent gets deported instead.

                Here is a typical example which got a lot of media coverage. A guy from South Africa moved to NZ on a temporary visa, after he brought his family over to join him, Immigration didn’t want a blind child to stay. But his argument was the care is better in NZ so she should be allowed to stay.