SHARE
COPY LINK

TOURISM

The Emily Effect? Why more and more Americans want to move to France

City bosses credit the 'Emily in Paris effect' but new polls show that a high percentage of Americans have a good opinion of France, and many would like to live here some day.

The Emily Effect? Why more and more Americans want to move to France
Cast members of Emily in Paris at the series three premiere launch in the French capital. (Photo by STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN / AFP)

How opinions change. In 2003, France was terra non grata in parts of USA because of then-President Jacques Chirac’s vociferous and determined opposition to the invasion of Iraq by George W Bush’s ‘Coalition of the Willing’. 

French fries were even renamed ‘Freedom Fries’ in some places, such was the righteous US anger at France’s position.

Now, however, according to an Ifop poll for US Francophile travel site Bonjour New York, the image of France and the French has transformed. A total 73 percent of US citizens have a good opinion of the country and its people, up from just 39 percent in 2007, four years after the political stand-off over the invasion of Iraq. 

And, of those Americans who have a ‘very good’ impression of the French, 47 percent have watched Emily in Paris, compared to 17 percent who have not.

Among fans, 86 percent have a good opinion of the show’s city chic location.

READ ALSO Emily in Paris’ Sylvie: ‘There’s a certain type of American who thinks they know everything, and we French block them’

More than one in three – 36 percent – of those surveyed said that they would be happy to live in France, compared to just over one in five (21 percent) in 2005.

If you’re among those who dreams of moving to France, head to our Moving to France section for more practical information, and the Americans in France section for information specifically tailored to US citizens. Members of The Local can also sign up HERE to our monthly Americans in France newsletter, giving you all the latest need-to-know information. 

However only 28 percent of working-age Americans (18 to 65) would move to France for work.

A total three-quarters (75 percent) of Americans would like to spend a short stay in Paris, the prospect of following in Emily’s footsteps by spending a year there also attracts nearly half (44 percent), especially among the younger age group, notably progressive urbanites.

While many who live in France – Paris in particular – may scoff at the Netflix show’s sanitised image of the capital, US people consider its portrayal of the city as accurate, with 83 percent of those polled saying it offers a realistic view.

READ ALSO 9 French Netflix series that aren’t Emily in Paris

And 67 percent of Americans consider Paris to be a ‘clean city’, compared to just 16 percent of Parisians, according to the survey.

But the poll’s authors pointed out that France’s image among Americans was improving before Emily in Paris hit the streaming service, and that cine-tourism – travel influenced by films or TV shows – is not a uniquely French thing: in 2019, some 80 million travellers chose their destinations because of films and series they had seen.

Beyond the Ifop poll, according to the 2023 Barnes City Index Ultra High-Net-Worth Individuals, the French capital has risen four places to the top of the list of the most sought-after cities for the very wealthy this year. And according to the British real estate agency “GetAgent”, searches for removals in Paris increased 1,416 percent after the release of the last season of Emily in Paris. 

Finally, according to the tourist board, visitor numbers to France were up significantly in 2022, with Greater Paris welcoming 7.2 million foreign visitors between January and the end of May. 

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

STRIKES

Olympic pay strike to ‘severely disrupt’ Paris public transport on Tuesday

A Tuesday rail strike over bonuses for Paris' July-August Olympic Games period will leave just one in five suburban commuter trains running on some lines in the French capital, operator SNCF have warned.

Olympic pay strike to 'severely disrupt' Paris public transport on Tuesday

Traffic will be “very severely disrupted”, SNCF said, with certain lines suspended outside peak hours.

The operator’s Transilien Paris regional network has urged people to work from home or find alternate transport on Tuesday, which follows a Monday public holiday.

Rail workers’ unions are pressuring SNCF in negotiations over bonuses for working through the Olympic period.

Their counterparts at transport operator RATP, which runs metro and bus services in Paris, have already secured an average 1,000-euro ($1,086) bonus, reaching up to 2,500 euros for the most in-demand train and bus drivers.

“We thought the talks were dragging on a bit and wanted to provoke something,” Fabien Villedieu of the SUD-Rail union told AFP on Friday.

“We have a heavy workload with 4,500 additional trains in August, so a whole range of our colleagues won’t be able to go on holiday,” he added.

Strikes and threats of industrial action during the Games have marked the months leading up to the event, including from rubbish collectors and government and medical workers.

Rubbish collectors this month won a pay rise on top of an Olympic bonus, heading off multiple days of walkouts flagged for later in May and over the period of the Games.

SHOW COMMENTS