Welcome to Portugal, the new expat haven.
Californians, please go home
BY JAWEED
KALEEMFOREIGN CORRESPONDENT
MAY 12,
2022 3 AM PT
CASCAIS,
Portugal — Jamie Dixon landed in this hilly seaside town nine months ago,
ditching her luxury trailer in Malibu for a two-floor rooftop apartment that’s
twice the size for a fraction of the rent.
Her escape
from her native California came amid growing costs of living, encroaching
wildfires and a waning sense of safety after the burglary of a neighbor’s home.
The fitness-trainer-turned-startup-worker decided it was time to reinvent
herself in a foreign land, but like many American expats she didn’t want to
feel too far from home.
In this
wealthy enclave about 15 miles from the Portuguese capital, Lisbon, she found
her slice of California on the west coast of Europe: ocean breezes, mountain
views, hot spring days on palm-tree-lined promenades, and the glow of sunsets
that seep into the night.
“Things
were just becoming too much back home, but I didn’t want to leave everything
about L.A. behind,” said Dixon, 37. Dressed in yoga pants and cross-trainers,
she sipped white wine at an organic cafe that overlooked waves crashing into
Big Sur-like cliffs a short walk from the rental she shares with her actor
husband and 7-year-old daughter.
“With
Portugal,” she said, “we could keep the parts we liked and leave the rest.”
In the last
decade, the overall population in Portugal has declined even as the number of
foreigners has grown by 40%. The ranks of American citizens living in this land
of 10 million shot up by 45% last year. Within the mix of retirees, digital
nomads and young families fed up with issues including the costs of housing and
healthcare, Trumpian politics and pandemic policies, Californians are making
themselves known in a country once considered the forgotten sibling of Spain.
“I’d say
95% of my clients are now Americans,” said André Fernandes, a 38-year-old
Porto-based real estate broker who, upon seeing the surge in interest in his
homeland, moved back from New Jersey three years ago and switched from
installing fire sprinklers to selling housing. “In the last week, I’ve called
or emailed with people from California, Arizona and New Mexico.” One recent
client, he said, was a Netflix writer.
Portugal
emerged from the financial crisis of the mid-2000s as one of the European
Union’s poorest nations. With the economy in shambles, Lisbon lawmakers drafted
immigration laws to aggressively court foreign professionals, from the wealthy,
who could essentially buy residency by purchasing land, to remote workers, who
could secure a path to citizenship by earning money abroad but spending it
here. More recently, the nation, which for the last seven years has hosted the
Web Summit tech conference, has fashioned itself as a tax haven for
cryptocurrency investors.
The
government estimates that foreigners have invested more than $6 billion in
Portugal since 2012 through property purchases alone. The closely related
tourist and rental industries brought in more than $10 billion last year and,
before the pandemic, represented 15% of the nation’s GDP. (During the same time
in the U.S., tourism accounted for less than 3% of the economy.)
For Dixon,
a fourth-generation Californian, the visa process was textbook. She and her
husband, Joey Dixon, had to open a Portuguese bank account with savings equal
to about $21,000 — about twice the minimum wage — and lock into a yearlong
lease.
Joey Dixon,
who has appeared in “Yellowstone” and “S.W.A.T.,” is starting an acting school
for other Hollywood transplants. His wife, who at first went through bouts of
loneliness, now comes home to plastic containers of homemade soup at her door
from the neighbor below, an older Portuguese woman, and has befriended a nearby
couple and their child who moved from New York and started a relocation company.
A few
blocks down the street, the Dixons have met a California couple — one of them
works for Adobe — who recently made the move. A family from Seattle is expected
to arrive this month and will occupy the first floor of the Dixons’ three-story
gated apartment building. Seeing an influx of Americans, their daughter’s
school recently hired an English teacher and now has bilingual instruction.
“My
Portuguese is still bad,” said Jamie Dixon, who has taken classes but uses her
favorite phrase to describe her attitude toward the slow journey of
integration: não faz mal (“no big deal”). She hopes to speak enough in five
years to pass the citizenship test, which would gain the family European Union
passports. With them comes the freedom to move and work throughout much of the
continent.
“You just
don’t know where America is headed these days. Are we going to be fighting with
each other forever? Are we in the Cold War again with Russia?” Dixon said.
“Getting that second passport would be a relief.”
But
resentment of newcomers is growing. Angelenos can’t always escape — and
sometimes are at the root of — questions over gentrification, income
disparities and immigration. The phrase “expat” itself has become loaded in
Lisbon, a city that attracts tens of thousands of working-class immigrants from
Brazil, Ukraine, Romania and India. In Facebook groups and cafe meetups,
well-to-do Westerners debate over how to define themselves. On the streets,
Portuguese activists have protested against evictions and skyrocketing rents
caused in part by foreigners with banks that count in dollars and pounds.
“There’s no
doubt that the foreign investment has greatly helped Portugal’s economy and
made the cities more beautiful,” said Isabel da Bandeira, an activist who co-founded
the Lisbon housing rights group Aqui Mora Gente (People Live Here). “But this
process has also hurt the long-term residents who don’t recognize parts of
their communities anymore or can’t afford to live in them.”
Across
Lisbon, the country’s largest urban center with 550,000 people, it’s hard to
miss the Californians. The city, where tourism has boomed over the years to the
point that entire streets in its historic core are made up exclusively of
hotels and Airbnbs, has attracted monied newcomers from across the world,
including the United Kingdom, Cape Verde, South Africa and Russia. But more
Americans are buying expensive property than any other foreigners, surpassing
the Chinese.
An article
last year in the Lisbon-based newspaper Diário de Notícias extolled the ties
between California and Portugal. “It’s fundamental to put Portugal on the map
for Californians,” Pedro Pinto, the Portuguese consul general in San Francisco,
said in the piece, as he suggested a direct flight from Los Angeles to Lisbon
“would have high demand” (there’s already one from San Francisco).
California
has long drawn the Portuguese. Spain and Portugal claim 16th century colonial
explorer Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo, who was the first European to land on
California’s shores, as one of their own. In the mid-19th century, droves of
farmers from the Azores made their way to Central California. In San Jose, the
Little Portugal neighborhood pays homage to the region’s immigrant history. But
today, the transplants go the other way and are of a different variety: upper
middle class or wealthier with online jobs or well-managed retirement accounts.
Lake
Arrowhead, CA - April 26: Natalie Camunas relaxes in a swing chair outside her
and her partner's cabin in Lake Arrowhead Tuesday, April 26, 2022. When the
35-year-old and her partner purchased a small cabin in the mountains two years
ago, they had intended to use it as an investment property that they would rent
out to vacationers looking for a forest escape. The couple bought the
670-square-foot home for $189,000, Camunas said, when housing prices in
Southern California were climbing, but before they smashed records and hit an
all-time high. But after quarantining in their apartment in Los Angeles's
Fairfax district as the COVID-19 pandemic spread, discovering dead rats in
their home and dealing with a bug infestation, they decided to make their move
to San Bernardino County official in the fall of 2020. (Allen J. Schaben / Los
Angeles Times)
After years
of divisive politics, failed wars, worsening wealth gaps and fights over
national identity, Americans are perhaps more flexible in their patriotism and
willing to make a home beyond their borders. For residents of California, where
the best and worst of America appear to constantly collide, the shores of
Portugal have offered a respite.
From the
retiree villages of Mexico and Central America to the red-white-and-blue
enclaves scattered throughout Asia and Europe, Americans have long had a
curious and at times contentious relationship with the world and its cultures.
They are often viewed as wanting to cast other nations in their image, a
criticism cleverly distilled in Graham Greene’s novel “The Quiet American.”
They want the exotic so long as there’s a scent of the familiar.
In
Portugal, some recent California expats have taken it upon themselves to make
the pitch for how to conjure a bit of their home state while living abroad.
Jen
Wittman, who moved with her husband and 13-year-old son to Lisbon in March last
year, runs a Facebook group called Californians Moving To/Living In Portugal.
In a community of migrants where dozens of Facebook pages function as a how-to
library on moving, Wittman said she created hers a year ago after seeing
Californians “getting mocked in other groups for very California questions,
like where to get good avocados and Mexican food.”
The
avocados have been easy to come by. The Mexican food, not so much, though there
is a San Diego couple who have a homemade tamale and Mexican import business.
“I feel
like we as Californians have more particular things we want. We want the sun,
the water, the amenities, the fresh and organic food,” said Wittman, 47, a
former chef who runs an online consulting company for small businesses with her
husband. “We also tend to have higher incomes than other Americans so people
get annoyed when we ask our budgeting questions in other expat groups.”
A resident
of Playa del Rey for 20 years, she left for Lisbon after a stint in Sonoma
County. For Wittman, it was her mother’s death and a desire to rethink the
future that spurred the move. She also wanted her son to have free college
tuition in EU nations once the family gains citizenship. In Portugal, she said,
she feels safer, has more affordable healthcare, and has gained distance from
the political division of America.
The rent on
the family’s furnished three-bedroom apartment, tucked away on a cobblestone
street next to a 13th century stone cathedral in the Alfama district, is 2,100
euros — less than $2,200. With its elevator access, renovated kitchen and a
view of cruise ships on the Tagus River, it’s a steal on their budget. Wittman,
accustomed to quick workday meals back home, now has leisurely hours-long
lunches at her favorite Portuguese restaurant, where a plate of salad, chicken
legs and potatoes is served with wine, espresso and mango custard for 10 euros,
or about $11.
Her
neighborhood, one of Lisbon’s oldest where every other apartment is now housing
for internationals, has been the center of protests over evictions and
gentrification. Wittman, who mostly mingles with foreigners, said she’s
received no hostility from locals. Instead, she too has felt the crunch of
Portugal’s growing popularity.
“We were
able to get a deal because of COVID and few people visiting the city,” said
Wittman, who still maintains bits of her Midwestern accent from her Indiana
upbringing. That was before a lease extension offer came in at 3,650 euros.
“Now that our time is coming up, we can’t even find anything affordable in the
city.”
Luis
Mendes, a geographer at the University of Lisbon, said the effect of Americans
and foreigners in Portugal is mixed.
“You cannot
deny that places like Lisbon have become much more appealing for young,
creative people with money to spend. The effect on the economy and the way the
buildings look — no longer empty — is astronomical,” said Mendes. “But the
average Portuguese person can no longer afford to live in the center of Lisbon.
Rents have gone up five times over a few years. Even the basic things, such as
buying groceries, take longer trips outside the city center than they used to.”
The trend
has hit not “only lifelong, lower-class residents but also gentrifiers who see
a 1,000-euros-per-month rented flat transformed into a 120-euro-per-night
Airbnb,” said Jordi Mateo, a professor at NOVA University of Lisbon.
The
government has recognized the crisis. As of this year, the nation’s popular
“golden visa” program, which offers residency to foreigners who buy homes
priced at 500,000 euros or more — Americans dominate the program — is no longer
taking applications in the biggest cities. That includes Lisbon, Porto and the
Algarve, the southern coastal region long popular with retirees and lovers of
surf culture.
In just a
few years, evictions have more than doubled in Lisbon. The city’s former mayor,
Fernando Medina, had launched an initiative to rent out hundreds of Airbnbs to
use as housing for local workers only to see his ambitions fizzle because
owners could make more on the private market. “Lisbon, don’t be French,” said a
recent comment on the Facebook page of the activist group Stop Despejos (Stop
Evictions), a reference to the exorbitant costs of expat-heavy destinations in
France.
While the
nation’s popularity has grown fast during the pandemic with prices for locals
and newcomers alike doing the same, those who arrived earlier have in some ways
fared better.
Therese
Mascardo, a 39-year-old therapist from Santa Monica, flew to Lisbon in 2019
after experimenting with online sessions to cut down on her four-hour daily
round-trip commute to Orange County. Frustrated with the Trump presidency, mass
shootings and a car-bound lifestyle, she said she sought out “the antiquity and
charm” of an old European city that was walkable. Mascardo was attracted to the
fact that right-wing parties have not made the same inroads in the nation as
they have elsewhere in Europe.
Today, she
can afford to work just two days a week — on a California schedule — while
building out an online social media therapy content brand in her free time. She
has money to spare after paying her monthly 1,000-euro rent. One Sunday a
month, she leads a rotating museum tour for digital nomads on stopovers in the
city.
From the
streets outside her three-bedroom apartment that straddles the Estrela and Lapa
neighborhoods, Mascardo, who grew up in Orange and studied at UC Berkeley, can
look downhill and spot the the 25th of April Bridge. Modeled after the Bay
Bridge, it is painted in the same red as the Golden Gate and reminds her of
home.
But despite
twice-yearly trips to Los Angeles, where she lugs in cheap Vinho Verde and
stocks up on Anthropologie candles and Trader Joe’s pea chips for the return,
she has no plans to leave.
“I love my
weekly stroll to the farmers market and being within a 15-minute walk of most
of my friends,” Mascardo said. “I love the kindness and hospitality of the
Portuguese people, especially when they graciously endure my nascent Portuguese
language skills and gently offer corrections and tips. I love that people eat
bread here and aren’t always talking about the restrictive diet they are on. I
love that dressing down is the standard way of existence here. I feel happier
and not just trying hard to be happy.”
Jamie Dixon
feels the same way.
Walking
recently along the Avenida da República, the cliffside road near her new home
that’s lined with cafes overlooking the ocean, she was for moments convinced
she was back in Malibu at a sort of Point Dume on the Atlantic. But as she
crossed the road and glimpsed the Portuguese street signs, she was reminded
that it takes time and patience to build a new life in a distant land.
“I miss
knowing people when I go out to a restaurant or bar. I miss frolicking in the
desert. I miss Palm Springs. I miss how easy it is to pay bills or renew my
license. I miss being fluent,” Dixon said. “It’s taken months to just feel like
we are barely settling in. But I feel safer here going out alone. I’m excited
my daughter will speak other languages.”
She was on
her way home to pack for a family trip to Mallorca, something that would have
required a week of time off and thousands of dollars when she was back in the
U.S. From here, it would be a quick weekend jaunt on the cheap.
“I thought
L.A. was the end-all, be-all and the only place out there,” she said. “But,
sometimes, you have to take a leap and realize America isn’t home forever.”
Jaweed
Kaleem is a national correspondent at the Los Angeles Times, currently on
special assignment as a correspondent in London. His journalism frequently
explores religion, race, politics, the environment and cultural debates.
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