In the US there are certain occupations that seem to attract people of certain nationalities (or at least that is the stereotype). For instance, if I imagine a nail technician, mini-mart owner, dry-cleaner, or taxi driver I tend to imagine a stereotypical person.
Does this happen in other countries with American expats?
Heh. My nephew worked (with zero experience or education) as an English teacher in China. Then he got thrown out of the country. Seems his sketchy-as-hell employer had gotten my nephew a tourist visa instead of a work visa, and it had expired.
Most of the folks I know who’ve done long stints overseas were either military or engineers. Ironic, since we import so many engineers to the US, but hey.
Military. I met perhaps a dozen Americans when I lived in the UK and all of them were military personnel or contractors, except my brother’s university flatmate.
The majority of American expats here - myself included - are working for O&G companies. The rest are teachers as well as the people associated with the US embassy.
I agree with military, although I used to work with a lot of Americans who were fund managers and other financial service professionals. One of them demanded that I petitioned the network team to allow audio streaming so that he could listen to Rush Limbaugh at his desk.
My American/Canadian wife runs a voluntary project in the area surrounding Edinburgh. There are, er, not many Americans in her field.
Another is tour guide for Americans visiting the foreign country, or owner/operator of an American-style restaurant or bar. In other words, something to take advantage of your American-ness.
That list doesn’t really hit the mark, in my opinion. Nail salon worker is one of the worst paid jobs in the US. That doesn’t make it any less associated with Asians.
The military is for the US military, though, and many of them seem to live in their own bubble rather than in the host country: living in the base, shopping in the base, kids go to school in the base… don’t they get Islander Syndrome or something?
The most common occupation for those working for local companies seems to be ESL; engineers and managers are often found in subsidiaries of American companies (a sore point for many locals when the location happens to have qualified people that companies from other countries are happy to hire); consultants are common in international projects when the mother company is American.
In Singapore, most Americans I know are business men, followed by English teachers.
Then once in a while the US navy shows up and you have all these young sailors in civilian clothes in town roaming around.