Video Briefing

Offshore Citizen: Living in Dubai vs Canada (What’s The Difference in Feeling?)

Mar 27, 2022Video Briefing10:54Watch on YouTube

Living in Dubai can feel freer than living in Canada despite the UAE being an absolute monarchy, due to the way residents are treated and services are structured.

• In Dubai, foreigners often feel like “customers”: rules exist, but daily life is oriented toward service and convenience, including housing, transport, and basic needs. • In Canada, residents can feel more like “resources to be extracted,” with obligations, taxes, and a perception of entitlement from the state, despite formal democratic rights. • Base-level living in Dubai ensures work, housing, and food for employed foreigners, even at low salaries, whereas extreme poverty and homelessness exist in areas like Vancouver’s East Hastings Street. • Workplace safety and labor protections are stronger in Canada, but middle-class residents still face high living costs and limited quality-of-life improvements from government systems. • Retirement and healthcare: Canada provides pensions and socialized healthcare, though benefits may be limited and access slow; Dubai lacks state-provided safety nets, but no income or social taxes allow individuals more personal control.

Takeaway: The perception of freedom and quality of life depends on how a system treats residents—Dubai’s customer-oriented model can feel more liberating than Canada’s rights-based but resource-extracting approach.