Sebastien Stolkiners He’s a young Argentinian who went viral in the last hours following a publication that he shared on his Twitter account, where he marked a difference between the holidays that are in our country compared to Canada. After going viral, the 19 year oldwho currently lives in Toronto, He provided more details about his life there. “The differences are noticeable,” he revealed of the day-to-day work between the two locations.
“In Canada, we only have six public holidays a year: New Year, Good Friday, Canada Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas. In Argentina there are 19. That’s why the country is the way it is“, he was the tweet he wrote on April 17 and this led to a debate that remains active to this day.
In relation to this subject, and in dialogue with THE NATIONSebastián assured that the repercussion took him by surprise and referred to the cultural differences that exist between Argentina and Canada, a place that welcomed him more than a year ago after receiving a scholarship for study his finance-oriented studies at the University of Torontoshortly after graduating from high school at ORT College.
“People like to work because they earn well and there are good salaries. Everyone thinks that vacations are free, but no, they have to be paid for. If there were fewer, there would be higher wages because companies know they are losing productivity. It’s not free not to go to work for a day, in a way it’s paid for,” he complained. “The Argentinian worker is less productive than those of other countries. GDP per capita in Canada is higher”he pointed.
According Stolkinersit’s all about the different views on work in the two countries. “In Argentina many work informally here it is completely different. You work, you have your salary and the minimum wage allows you to live well. There is a very big cultural difference. Those who don’t work are frowned upon here,” he said.
On the other hand, he maintained that he had made a comparison between Argentine and Canadian holidays, and that the figure completely amazed him. “If you add the provincial holidays in Argentina, the bill reaches much more… I fall short. Here they normally work eight hours a day for five days and rest on weekends. The culture of adding holidays affects the economy, but that’s not the only problem, there are others that add to the existing political, economic and social crisis. I consider it something that graphically expresses why the country is the way it is.”he explained.
Regarding the differences between his country of birth and the one he lives in today, he argued that “these are two antagonistic models”. In this sense, he compares: “Here, there is no insecurity and there is no economic instability either. The differences are very clear, Go out to the street at any time and nothing happens to you, even the possibility of saving. People here do not know the exchange rate with the dollar, and in Argentina there are few people who do not know”.
According to his own opinion, “The economic conflict in Argentina is the fault of decades of failed policies that have failed”. Based on this sentence, he listed: “State interventionism, the issuance of money to finance public expenditure, taxes…There is something wrong and it is something of endemic. Ultimately, the problem is the budget deficit. Today Argentina is an unproductive country”.
In this sense, Stolkiners underlined the various political parties in Canada and assured that they all have a common goal.
“There is a lot of stability here. All parties, unlike Argentina, have common plans for the future. In Argentina we win and they change everything. Everyone here believes in capitalism, there are leftist parties that are capitalist but maybe with more state intervention. However, they all have a specific purpose,” he stressed.
Finally, he argued that although the scholarship he received is only for four years, His plan is to stay focused on his career and continue his professional career in this country.
“Amateur introvert. Pop culture trailblazer. Incurable bacon aficionado.”