Singapore and Paris the world’s priciest cities, report finds

88m3

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Singapore has outstripped Tokyo as the world’s most expensive city for expatriates, according to annual rankings by the Economist Intelligence Unit released on Tuesday.

Paris rose six places to become the world’s second-most expensive city, which the report said in part reflected a recovery by European economies.

It cited a strong Singaporean dollar, the high price of utilities and the cost of car ownership as among the factors contributing to Singapore taking the top spot away from Tokyo, which for years has led the rankings.

The calculations are based on the cost of living in US dollars and look at over 400 individual prices in 140 cities.

Mumbai was the least expensive major city in which to live, partly due to government subsidies on some products and low local wages. It was followed by Karachi, New Delhi and Damascus as the fourth-cheapest, which the report said reflected the weakening of the Syrian pound due to the country’s civil war.

“Improving sentiment in structurally expensive European cities combined with the continued rise of Asian hubs means that these two regions continue to supply most of the world’s most expensive cities,” Jon Copestake, editor of the report, said in a statement.

After Singapore and Paris, the 10 cities with the highest cost of living, in descending order, were Oslo, Zurich, Sydney, Caracas, Geneva, Melbourne, Tokyo and Copenhagen.

London was ranked 15th most expensive city while New York was in 26th place, “but Asian cities also continue to make up many of the world’s cheapest, especially in the Indian subcontinent”.

The report said Singapore’s curbs on car ownership, which include a quota system and high taxes, made it “significantly more expensive than any other location when it comes to running a car”. A new Toyota Corolla Altis costs $110,000 in Singapore compared to around $35,000 in neighbouring Malaysia.

Overall transport costs in Singapore are almost three times higher than those in New York, it said.

“In addition, as a city-state with very few natural resources to speak of, Singapore is reliant on other countries for energy and water supplies, making it the third most expensive destination for utility costs,” the report said.

It also noted that Singapore is the priciest place in the world to buy clothes, as malls and boutiques in its popular Orchard Road retail hub import luxury European brands to “satisfy a wealthy and fashion-conscious consumer base”.

Singapore has one of the world’s highest concentrations of millionaires relative to its 5.4 million population. Its per capita income of more than $51,000 in 2012 masks a widening income gap between the richest and poorest.
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http://www.france24.com/en/20140304...=reseaux_sociaux&ns_fee=0&ns_linkname=editori
 

88m3

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I thought living in New York was getting bad.

:heh:
 

Crakface

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How does a car that costs under 10 grand to make cost 10 times that amount to buy. :mjlol:

Does it cost that much to ship that trash?
 

88m3

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Singapore to Overtake Tokyo as Asia’s Wealthy Hub in 2023
By Sanat Vallikappen Mar 5, 2014 9:50 PM ET
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Photographer: Munshi Ahmed/Bloomberg
Loungers sit on the sundeck of the 187-feet-long SY Montigne, anchored at ONE°15 ... Read More

Singapore is poised to surpass Tokyo as the Asian city with the most ultra-high-net-worth individuals within a decade as its stature as a financial center increases with the region’s growth.

Singapore will have 4,878 people with $30 million or more in assets excluding their principal residence by 2023, a 55 percent gain from last year, and trailing only London globally, according to a report from Knight Frank LLP yesterday. The number of these millionaires in Tokyo will climb 8 percent to 3,818, ranking the city fourth worldwide after New York.

“The main battleground is Asia, where a handful of locations are slugging it out in the hope of establishing a clear lead as the region’s alpha urban hub,” Nicholas ****, Knight Frank’s Asia-Pacific head of research, said in a statement yesterday.

Singapore has overtaken Tokyo as the world’s most expensive city, the Economist Intelligence Unit’s Worldwide Cost of Living Survey showed on March 4. The city-state leapt five spots to top the ranking after its currency appreciated and the cost of car ownership and luxury apparel climbed, according to the EIU’s report.

The number of ultra-high-net-worth individuals in Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh City will almost triple by 2023 to 246 from 90, the largest increase among the more than 80 cities tracked by Knight Frank. That was followed by a 148 percent advance in Jakarta to 857.


Photographer: Munshi Ahmed/Bloomberg
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Second Home
Singapore’s business environment, tax regime, political stability and its growing status as a key regional financial hub have drawn wealthy people to the city, Alice Tan, head of consultancy and research at Knight Frank Singapore, said in yesterday’s statement.

Almost a quarter of Asia’s ultra-high-net-worth individuals are considering buying another home in the next 12 months, with Singapore following the U.K. as the top location for second-home ownership.

The Southeast Asian country’s economy expanded by an annualized 6.1 percent in the December quarter as manufacturing picked up, with the government predicting an improvement in overseas demand in 2014.

London is expected to have 4,940 ultra-high net-worth individuals by 2023, while New York will take the No. 3 spot with 3,825, according to Knight Frank. The total in Hong Kong will rise 37 percent to 3,502, helping the city retain its No. 5 spot.

To contact the reporter on this story: Sanat Vallikappen in Singapore at vallikappen@bloomberg.net



http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-03-05/singapore-to-overtake-tokyo-as-2023-s-asian-millionaires-hub-1-.html?x=3

:wow:

Uhhh did they start printing money, a new slave trade I missed, heroin?

@Domingo Halliburton
 

Liu Kang

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@mbewane @Liu Kang can I stay wit yall when I hit up paris :lupe:
:lolbron:
I don't live in Paris but in its suburbs (not the same sense than the US ones)
I posted it already but Paris as understood in the rest of the world is the whole Ile de France region. But the very Paris is the red zone. All the rest is its suburbs, the orange being the little crown, and the yellow the big crown.
The further you are from the red, the less expensive things get overall. Because 93 is one of the poorest regions (and 92 the richest) in France but that's another story. I live in the big crown so you'll be far from Paris breh.

tarifs_remorquage_ile_de_france.gif


And having say that, the high prices aren't in the whole Paris, they are mostly in a few western districts (1, 6, 8, 16) where all the rich go and who then drive prices up like crazy. 10, 13, 18, 19 and 20 are the poorest Parisian areas (the last 3 having really poor and tough areas). :

Paris_and_suburbs_map2.jpg
 

PikaDaDon

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Singapore is so fukking tiny. If I were rich I'd live in Venice instead:

 
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