SPAIN VS. FRANCE: VIVE LA FRANCE
By Helena Frith Powell, Sunday Times, 5 February 2006
The welcome you get from the locals
Everybody knows the reputation: snooty, arrogant,
unfriendly. And that's just the poodles. The people
are thought to be worse, but that's propaganda,
or something exclusive to Paris. Here in the south
- where they hate Parisians - we have had an almost
universal welcome. The locals have endured us
mangling their language and invited us to their
parties. The local hunters even showed their appreciation
of us by leaving us the leg of a dead pig on the
kitchen table last week, bless them.
Communication factor/language
There's no denying that French is one of the
world's most difficult languages to master. So
tricky, in fact, that many French people don't
learn it properly. However, most of us learn French
at school, which gives us some kind of start.
Make an effort, and you will discover that the
locals are willing to help. Of course, there's
no need to speak Spanish in Spain, because everyone
you meet will come from Essex and be trying to
sell you a half-built apartment in Malaga. Their
English might be hard to understand, though.
Quality of life
This is the main reason people move to France
from Britain. There is no doubt it beats Spain
in every respect. I mean, who wants to wait until
three o'clock for lunch and ten o'clock for dinner?
Here in France we eat at midday, like civilised
human beings, and we like to have a nap in the
afternoon. There is also the question of what
you eat and drink. Do you really want to live
off paella and tapas? And there are only two vaguely
edible cheeses in Spain - manchego and another
so bland its name escapes me - compared with more
than 300 in France. Spanish wine? Cava versus
champagne? No contest. If quality and length of
life are what you're after, look no further than
France. It has the best healthcare system in the
world; there is no better place to grow to a ripe
old age.
Property choice and prices
The good thing about buying in France as opposed
to Spain is that once you buy a house, the authorities
don't just come and take it away from you. As
for choice of property, I have always thought
that Spain looks like it was half-built by a
Moroccan in a hurry. In contrast, France has
splendid houses and lovely villages. The only
region in Spain that I might choose to visit
is the Costa Brava. Which has the added advantage
of being close to France.
Climate
France has everything you could want in terms
of climate. If the winter is too cold in Brittany,
you can pop down to St Tropez. When it gets
too hot in the summer, you can head to the Alps
for fresh air and a little hill-walking.
Presence of other Brits
There are lots of Brits in France, but it's
a large country and they are widely dispersed.
Most people who move to the country are civilised.
They have come to France because they like the
way of life, unlike their counterparts in Spain,
who are often on the run from the law. Most
Brits make an effort to integrate with the locals
and don't hide themselves in golfing ghettos.
If you really want to avoid other expats, you
just have to choose the right location. Anyway,
those you are likely to run into are going to
be more interesting than those you will come
across on the Costa del Sol.
Travel and access
There are flights back to the UK from most
French cities. And they don't just fly to London
but to all over the country. If flying is not
your thing, you can take the Eurostar from Lille
or Paris. The rail network in France is so good
you will be able to get from anywhere to Paris
and then home. If you don't like that idea,
there are hovercraft and ferries poised to whizz
you back to Blighty. Try getting a boat or a
train from Spain, and you'll be travelling for
days.
What to do when you get there
In Spain, the choices are between opening a
pub to cater for all the beer-guzzlers around
you or becoming an estate agent. In France,
the gîte option may no longer be as viable,
but there are plenty of other choices. English
people here have done everything from opening
restaurants and bookshops to running riding
holidays. You also have the added advantage
of being able to get back to England easily
(see travel above), should you need to commute
for work.
If you're stuck, France has a chronic shortage
of plumbers; after a spot of retraining, you'll
be coining it. In your spare time, the possibilities
are endless. If it's skiing you're after, France
has the best mountains this side of the Rockies.
Spain has second-rate resorts nobody has ever
heard of, where it's unlikely to snow more than
a couple of millimetres. You also have the choice
of the Mediterranean and the Atlantic. Okay,
so Spain has both, too, but it only has the
Atlantic in Galicia, where it rains all the
time.
Then there is culture: the Paris opera, the
Montpellier dance festival, the festivals at
Aix and Avignon. What has Spain got? The public
slaughter of innocent bovines, otherwise known
as bullfighting.
Bureaucracy and taxes on property
France is the home of bureaucracy, but at least
it works and you know where you are with it.
In Spain, before you buy a property you need
to apply for some horribly complicated piece
of paper that proves your identity so they know
who you are when they come to take the house
away from you. Taxes in France are simple: there
is the habitation tax and the land tax. You
have to pay them both.
If you have a lot of money in France and want
to hide from the taxman, you can head to the
glamour of Monaco. In Spain, you have Andorra,
one of the drabbest locations in the world.
Future potential
Much has been made of the riots in France last
year. It's true that burning cars are not pretty.
But all the action took place in the suburbs,
where few, if any, British people would choose
to live. Spain is so bad that half of it - Catalonia,
the Basque country and possibly Galicia - would
like to leave. And if they do, the army has
promised to intervene. I for one don't want
to end up like that poor Chinaman with his shopping
bags in Tiananmen Square.
© Helena Frith Powell
© Mark Stucklin (Spanish Property Insight)
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