European and Asian cities dominate the top 10 most costly cities for expats to live in according to Mercer’s worldwide rankings 2008.
29 July 2008 AMSTERDAM- For the third year running, Moscow is the world’s most expensive city for expatriates according to the latest Cost of Living Survey from Mercer. Tokyo climbs two places since last year to second place, whereas London drops one place to rank third. Oslo moves up six places to rank 4th and is followed by South Korea’s Seoul. For instance, although Moscow ranks as the most expensive place to live overall in the world, petrol costs EUR 0.558 for One litre of gasoline, unleaded 95 octane while the equivalent for Amsterdam, which ranks 25th, is EUR 1.38. This general global trend for price increases is partly balanced by decreasing prices for certain commodities such as electronic and electrical goods.
Popular expat cities in Expatica countries Amsterdam (25th), Barcelona (31st), Brussels (39th) and Berlin (38th) still don’t make the top 20 while Geneva (9th) Paris (12th) remain in the top 15.
With New York as the base city scoring 100 points, Moscow scores 142.4 and is close to three times costlier than Asunción in Paraguay, which is the least expensive city in the ranking for the sixth year running with an index of 52.5.
Contrary to the trend observed last year the gap between the world’s most and least expensive cities now seems to be widening.
“Current market conditions have led to the further weakening of the US dollar which, coupled with the strengthening of the Euro and many other currencies, has caused significant changes in this year’s rankings,” says Yvonne Traber of Mercer.
Although the traditionally expensive cities of Western Europe and Asia still feature in the top 20, cities in Eastern Europe, Brazil and India are creeping up the list. Conversely, some locations such as Stockholm and New York now appear less costly by comparison.
"Our research confirms the global trend in price increases for certain foodstuffs and petrol, though the rise is not consistent in all locations," says Traber.
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