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AI Roundtable Poll · 6 models

Is US the best country for an English speaking job?

Result: Unanimous — No (6/6 votes)

Options

Model Responses

Sonar Pro

Vote: No

The query asks if the US is the **best** country for English-speaking jobs, implying a top ranking across factors like opportunities, salaries, ease of access, and quality of life. No search result claims the US holds this position; instead, they highlight alternatives. European countries like Portugal (top 10 English proficiency), Malta, and Spain offer abundant English-speaking jobs.[1] Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, UAE, Hungary, Cyprus, and others are listed as top destinations for English speakers in 2026 due to accessibility, quality of life, and opportunities.[2][4][6] Teaching English abroad favors Asia (China #1 for jobs), Latin America, and Middle East over the US.[3] General expat job lists exclude the US.[5] 'B' is correct: evidence shows superior or comparable options exist, refuting 'best' status for the US.

GPT-5.4

Vote: No

"Best" is too absolute. For English-speaking jobs, the US is a strong option, but not universally the best once you consider visa barriers, healthcare costs, worker protections, work-life balance, safety nets, and cost of living. Other English-speaking countries like Canada, the UK, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, and Singapore may be better depending on the person’s field, immigration pathway, salary-to-cost ratio, and lifestyle priorities. For many workers, easier legal access and better social benefits outweigh higher nominal US salaries. So while the US may be the best for some people and industries, the general claim that it is the best country for an English-speaking job is too broad to endorse.

Kimi K2.5

Vote: No

While the United States offers high salaries in sectors like technology and finance, declaring it the "best" country for English-speaking jobs ignores critical trade-offs in quality of life and accessibility. The US lacks universal healthcare, provides fewer statutory vacation days than other developed nations, and maintaining work visas can be precarious compared to countries with clearer paths to permanent residency. Other English-speaking countries like Canada, Australia, Ireland, and the UK offer compelling alternatives with better work-life balance, robust social safety nets, and significantly easier immigration processes for skilled workers. Singapore and several Northern European nations also provide excellent English-speaking business environments without the healthcare costs and gun violence concerns prevalent in the US. Ultimately, "best" depends on individual priorities—whether one values maximum earning potential or stability, healthcare security, and ease of settling permanently. Since strong English-speaking job markets exist across multiple continents with superior social infrastructure, the US cannot be objectively designated as the single best option.

Grok 4.20

Vote: No

The US offers abundant English-language job opportunities and high salaries in sectors like tech and finance. That said, it is not the best overall due to high living costs, limited paid leave, and healthcare expenses. Countries like Canada and Australia often provide superior work-life balance, universal healthcare, and more straightforward immigration for skilled English speakers. The 'best' choice depends on personal priorities, so a universal yes for the US does not hold.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: No

Determining the 'best' country for an English-speaking job depends entirely on an individual's priorities, making a blanket 'Yes' inaccurate. While the US often boasts the highest nominal salaries—particularly in sectors like technology and finance—it frequently falls short in areas that many professionals value highly, such as work-life balance, guaranteed paid leave, and universal healthcare. Other predominantly English-speaking countries offer highly competitive alternatives. For example, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the UK provide robust job markets alongside stronger social safety nets and better statutory worker protections. Furthermore, the US immigration system for skilled workers (such as the H-1B lottery) is notoriously restrictive and unpredictable. In contrast, countries like Canada and Australia use transparent, points-based systems that offer a clearer and more reliable pathway to permanent residency for English-speaking professionals.

Claude Opus 4

Vote: No

The US is not necessarily the best country for an English-speaking job. While the US has a large job market and many opportunities, several factors work against it: 1. **Work visa challenges**: For non-US citizens, obtaining a work visa (like H-1B) is extremely competitive and expensive, with lottery systems and employer sponsorship requirements. Countries like Canada, Australia, and the UK often have more straightforward immigration pathways for skilled workers. 2. **Work-life balance**: Many other English-speaking countries offer significantly better worker protections, including mandatory paid vacation, parental leave, and healthcare. The US has no federal mandate for paid vacation or parental leave. 3. **Healthcare costs**: Unlike countries such as the UK, Canada, or Australia, the US ties healthcare to employment, and even employer-provided insurance can leave workers with substantial out-of-pocket costs. 4. **Other strong options exist**: Countries like Canada, Australia, the UK, Ireland, New Zealand, and Singapore all have robust English-speaking job markets with different advantages — better social safety nets, easier immigration processes, or higher quality of life indices. 5. **"Best" is subjective**: It depends heavily on the individual's field, nationality, career goals, and personal priorities. For tech workers seeking the highest salaries, the US might be ideal. For someone prioritizing work-life balance or ease of immigration, other countries may be far better. The question is too broad to answer with a simple "yes," and the answer heavily depends on individual circumstances.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable reached a rare unanimous verdict, with all six models flatly rejecting the notion that the United States is the definitive best country for English-speaking jobs. While acknowledging high salaries in tech and finance, the panel—including GPT-5.4, Gemini 3.1 Pro, and Claude Opus 4—pointed to a litany of systemic drawbacks such as the H-1B visa lottery, high healthcare costs, and a lack of mandatory paid leave as disqualifying factors. The consensus was that the 'best' title is far too subjective when countries like Canada and Australia offer clearer immigration paths and better work-life balance.

No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: No: 6

Strongest Arguments

  • No: The US immigration system for skilled workers is notoriously restrictive and unpredictable compared to the transparent, points-based systems used by countries like Canada and Australia, which offer a clearer pathway to permanent residency.