Culture complements us, who we are, what we believe, and how we act. About 4 years ago, I had the opportunity to live in Ecuador. I felt the relationship and communication perspective very interesting, and in two years I was able to notice some distinct intercultural differences between America and the culture of Ecuador. As my analysis of Ecuador is based solely on my personal experience, I have also invited Louis Salas, a friend from Quito, Ecuador, who currently attends Brigham Young University and has his own opinion. Please show more by knowing how he lives in the USA ...
Whether it is international politics or economic trend, there is some uncertainty in any culture "(Davidson). I noticed that Ecuador is very different from the United States in that it accepts uncertainty. Most people work to meet their specific needs rather than their own needs and the risks in the culture of Ecuador are unbearable. If you do not succeed at some risk, some people may lose value. Most of them are very happy with their financial situation and there is no reason to take risks. From the time he spent in the United States, Rui said he realized he realized that he took more risk in terms of money. He also said he valued the way the United States would accept in this change. Change is a good thing and we believe that diversity can be added to our lives. Rui recognizes that adventure can make many people successful. The concept of risk is new to Louis and agrees with the United States to avoid uncertainty. Since the United States consists of several successful companies and distribution companies, I think that taking risks is not as "adventurous" as taking risks in a very uncertain place like Ecuador. As dangerous behavior always causes something to go down, so many people obviously oppose it. In such a place
Ecuadorian Americans (Spanish: Ecuadorian Americans, Oceania Ecuagento, or Ecuador · Equatoriano Estadriidenses) are all or part of the Ecuadorian Americans. Ecuadorian Americans can be Caucasian, mixed-blooded, Afro-Ecuador, Aboriginal, Mura, Zambia. Some Ecuadoreans are also Lebanese, Hispanic and Japanese. Until the 1960s, the Ecuadoreans had hardly migrated to America. Between 1930 and 1959, 11,025 Ecuadorians acquired legal permanent residency in the United States. From now on, the flow of slow immigration continues. Trade relations and seasonal immigration with New York has become a way to immigrants in the 1950s and 1960s. In the late 1960s, several migration waves began. Since the early 1970s, most Ecuadori have migrated to the United States. There are several reasons for this immigration. First, the US immigration law has changed.
Until the 1960s there were few immigrants in Ecuador. Several people moved to Venezuela and emigrated to America in the 1940s. According to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), between 1930 and 1959, 11,025 Ecuadorians acquired legal permanent residency in the United States. By the 1960s, small communities of Ecuador could be found in Los Angeles, Chicago, New York. The state of Azuay and Cañar, and Cuenca, the third largest city in Ecuador, formed the core import and export areas of Ecuador in the 1970s and 1980s. The main sending community is implementing self-sufficiency agriculture, and there are traditional women who weave Panama's hat and export to New York, and men seasonally migrate to the coast.
According to the US Census Bureau's US Community Survey, an estimated 645,000 Ecuadorian Hispanics lived in the United States in 2011. The Ecuadorian of this statistical profile is a self-declared Ecuadorian Hispanic, which means they are all Ecuadorian immigrants, or that they are following the Ecuadorian family's ancestors. The population of Ecuador is the tenth largest Hispanic population living in the United States, accounting for 1.2% of the Hispanic population in 2011. Mexicans are the largest Hispanic population in the country, accounting for 34.5% of the Hispanic population, accounting for 64.6%. 2011.1