“There are differences in latitudes ,” says Walch, “but they’re always engulfed by artificial light and culture. While time of sunrise and sunset do play a role in all of this, it’s a far smaller one than when we lived in the state of nature. The French rival the Spanish for late-night café life, but it’s Spain and Singapore that are the last in the world-or at least the last in the sample group-to hit the lights and call it a day. Germany maintains sensible hours in the middle of both charts. Americans indeed keep retirement community hours, with the fourth earliest bedtime (after Belgium, Australia and New Zealand) and the very earliest wake time. Despite having the luxury to sleep in every morning, millionaires are known to be early risers. The Japanese tend to get up early and go to bed late-consistent with their reputation for early-rising industriousness and long evenings spent socializing with co-workers. The results, in a lot of ways, ran true to cultural form. This means that extremely wealthy people make a point of educating themselves on a daily basis. ![]() For the sake of simplicity and statistical significance, the researchers limited the places they considered to the 20 that submitted the most results: the U.S., Australia, Canada, the U.K., France, Spain, The Netherlands, Denmark, Germany, Belgium, China, Japan, Brazil, Switzerland, Singapore, Hong Kong, Italy, Finland, New Zealand and the United Arab Emirates. According to research done on a rich habits website, 63 of wealthy people admitted to listening to podcasts when they go to work, compared to poor people of which only 5 do. ![]() Beyond those broad averages, however, geography and nationality drove the sample group in a variety of directions.
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