it all depends on the currency in each of these countries, the dollar has always been one of the top currencies in topping the world's currencies. Surely it would be very profitable if someone from a country whose currency is under the dollar follows a campaign and is paid using dollars.
maybe for people in America or countries with dollar bills $ 300 looks normal, but if $ 300 dollars are used
in a low currency country, it will definitely be very profitable and sufficient for everyday life.
$1 in America
What can one US dollar buy? In America, you can use that money to buy a slice of pizza, a gas lighter, paying for one hour of parking, a medium-sized bottle of mineral water, candy, postcards, cotton buds, and many other things.
in my country $1 can be bought for 1.2 liters of fuel, 7 gas lighters, 5 medium-sized bottles of mineral water, paying for parking for a day and a night, buying a fair amount of candy.
for $1 in the country where I live I can eat very full.
so it's no wonder $100 or $300 per week can be very special and very valuable.
Well, if $100 to $300 per week is enough (that's a pretty broad range), do you think that you can sustain somewhere between $100 and $300 per week on a signature campaign, and do you believe it would be prudent to attempt to buy bitcoin too? would there be any savings left with that level of cashflow?
There are a lot of complaining all over the world regarding inflation, but stil there are likely places in which people with a steady income of $100 to $300 per week can live better in another location (as compared with a western city), but there would still be questions regarding sustainability and there may well be questions regarding whether anyone is going to want to live in that place for several years (is it even possible or feasible.. such as documents to be able to stay).
You are just vaguely answering one part of the question to say that a guy/gal can get by for $100 to $300 per week, but then you are not really saying very much else regarding what the lifestyle might be like for those kinds of prices.. and surely there seems to be a pretty big difference between $100 per week and $300 per week. You did not even say which country, either.. so how is the weather in that location, and is it in rural areas or close to cities with supplies and restaurants?
here I will be more detailed in explaining, $ 300 if converted into the currency of the country where I live, that money is around 4,525,395.00.
and the 4,525,395.00 is one month's salary for a security guard,
so it would be very helpful if usually that amount of money was earned with one month's work, for example now with that kind of money you can get it with one week's work.
for food costs, 1 liter of rice here costs 9000 per liter, if converted to dollars it costs $ 0.60
$300 can buy almost 500 kg of rice.
and for side dishes or vegetables here it is very cheap, cheaper than rice.
$300 a week can buy a few weeks' supply of food.
here the climate is tropical, and the cost of eating at a food stall for one meal is around the price of 15,000 if the dollar is $ 0.99
means that with $ 300 you can eat 300 times.
with side dishes, one piece of chicken, one bowl of rice, and vegetables.
so that's quite a big $ 300 per week.
Ok. fair enough. You are being more specific, so I am imagining that $300 per month is enough to allow you to get by with a very basic living (living the same or similar kind of lifestyle as a security guard), and so any amount more than $300 per month would allow you to live a higher standard of living.
So, you still did not say which city (or country or which part of the world that you are talking about) and you still did not say whether you would be living within an area that has a lot of access to goods and services, and of course, many major cities around the world do have access to a large variety of goods and services, but the more off of the beat-n-path they are, then the more challenging that it might be for a westerner in terms of kinds of options available and whether s/he might be feeling as if s/he is living like a king or suffering because s/he is missing out on certain kinds of goods/services that s/he is used to in the prior country (location).
I surely would like to attempt to figure out the bigger costs, and the most likely basic costs that have to be incurred, such as housing, food, transportation, internet (and communications such as phone services), and perhaps some other basics, and you did go into some further details in the seeming relative inexpensiveness of the eating out situation.., but of course, there are still those other essential basic costs that would need to be incurred.... ...
Even if a westerner (or a foreigner) comes into a new location, it might take them 1 or 2 months just to accommodate themselves to various kinds of savings that the locals are used to experiencing, so frequently many foreigners are going to have to pay more for almost any goods and services, until they get more used to the various locations of goods and services and even the various ways to potentially negotiate better prices in terms of something like lodging.
And, even if we are talking about a lodging situation, there are some lodging situations that might have several rooms and already furnished (and perhaps even some other conveniences that are specifically related to that kind of lodging), and then there could be questions regarding whether utilities are including and whether heating/air conditioning is needed, whether internet is included, and whether their is a kitchen therein... so maybe even if a foreigner comes to such a new location, they might need to have more things already included in their lodging (so that will cost more), but if the foreigner decides to stay for a longer time, then such foreigner might want to set up a lot more of his/her own items and systems (furnishings and even perhaps paying his own utilities and internet).