If you think layoffs were bad the last few years then just wait until the costs for all the ai hardware, massively overpriced talent, and acquisitions hit the books for these companies. It's going to be a bloodbath.
Given the wage difference ... what does it matter? You make 200%-300% after tax in the US what you make in high cost areas of Europe (despite that the pre-tax difference is closer to 75% to maybe 125%). Normal US pay is comparable to tax-haven pay elsewhere: Europe (London, Luxembourg), Middle East (UAE), Asia (Singapore).
So in "a few years" (let's say 2-3 years) you'd be able to make between 5 and 10 years' worth of European net pay. If you don't raise your spending, that will easily cover your living expenses during the next recession, even if you spend all of it unemployed.
And that's if you start now. If you've been doing this for 10 years already ... wow.
Given the wage difference ... what does it matter? You make 200%-300% after tax in the US what you make in high cost areas of Europe (despite that the pre-tax difference is closer to 75% to maybe 125%). Normal US pay is comparable to tax-haven pay elsewhere: Europe (London, Luxembourg), Middle East (UAE), Asia (Singapore).
So in "a few years" (let's say 2-3 years) you'd be able to make between 5 and 10 years' worth of European net pay. If you don't raise your spending, that will easily cover your living expenses during the next recession, even if you spend all of it unemployed.
And that's if you start now. If you've been doing this for 10 years already ... wow.