Forums › Rave › Clubbing & Raving › Ravers! Can you help me out?
1. Singapore, Singapore
2. Paris, France
3. Oslo, Norway
4. Zurich, Switzerland
5. Sydney, Australia
Singapore has topped 131 cities globally to become the world’s most expensive city to live in 2014, according to the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU).
The city’s strong currency combined with the high cost of running a car and soaring utility bills contributed to Singapore topping the list.
It is also the most expensive place in the world to buy clothes.
Singapore replaces Tokyo, which topped the list in 2013.
Other cities making up the top five most expensive cities to live in are Paris, Oslo, Zurich and Sydney, with Tokyo falling to sixth place.
The EIU’s Worldwide Cost of Living Survey is a relocation tool that uses New York city as a base. It looks at more than 400 individual prices.
Soaring Asia
The top 10 cities this year have been dominated by Asian and Australasian cities as well as some in Europe.
“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,” said the editor of the report, Jon Copestake.
“But Asian cities also continue to make up many of the world’s cheapest, especially in the Indian subcontinent.”
Most Asian cities that top the list are there for predominantly higher costs of groceries. Tokyo is still at the top of the list for everyday food items.
Inexpensive India
However, not all Asian cities are tough on the wallet.
India’s major cities – including Mumbai and New Delhi – were found to be among the least expensive in the world.
Mumbai’s prices are kept low by large income inequality.
The low wages of many of the city’s workers keep spending low, and government subsidies have helped them stay that way.
Outside of the subcontinent, Damascus in Syria saw the largest drop, becoming the fourth cheapest city in the world as the country’s ongoing conflict has led to plummeting prices.
It certainly seems that leccy is expensive, as I was reading a gadgets forum last night (curious as to whether they had got digital TV yet) and they were grousing about running a set top box as it had to be plugged in, and similarly active antennas. One chap took to building his own DTV antenna.
Motor cars are indeed costly to run, as the government actively discourages their use, its a small country, there are already problems with smog, so why add to pollution? However there are all sorts of buses, electric trains (long distance ones and metropolitan ones) and it is one of the safest Asian countries to cycle in; there are e-bikes too.
Clothes might be expensive because there are a lot of hipster arty types making designer gear and both boys and girls wear it, added to which they are both are a size larger than any other Asians (food is still affordable, and Singaporeans like eating).
No 7 in the list is Copenhagen…
I’ve read there are huge taxes on cars in the country making them some of the most expensive in the world. I didn’t know it was about reducing polution though which is commendable.
SG is viewed globally as a low tax, pro-business country, and it is, but it is not as right wing as its made out to be – and when they do tax folk, the money is spent on such things as education, public transport and the HDB social housing (clearly based on British council house tower blocks).
My late father went there for 6th form in the 1960s (even though his family was 500km away in Penang!) to a Roman Catholic high school / seminary, making the journey to and from by train, and even then it was advanced by Asian standards. In both countries, as a young man he seemed to be able to easily afford Japanese cameras, and Fuji filmstock (and also Agfa), and got a job as a news reporter for a year or two (at a Malaysia branch of a SG newspaper) before he met my mum at a teacher training college in Kuala Lumpur. I always got the impression he was conflicted about whether emigrating to London or Singapore would have been better, especially as he got older, but only recently worked out (from a stamp collection in inherited) why he had such a fascination with the place given how far away it was from where he grew up….
Clearly your parents travelled a lot before they settled. Mine did too. It’s an odd thing trying to stay put after you’ve got used to so much change.
Their emigration may have been more of an impact, both of them would have been born in the same country (Malaya) and that (including Singapore) is geographically big – larger than Norway!
Although Dad would have been also travelling from an independent sovereign nation back into the British Empire which would have impacted a lot of his thinking.
That report is like the EU one about violence against women, some things seem bad but they aren’t. I checked the price of the set top box the Singapore gadget freaks were complaining about and it was no worse than a similar SD one in UK and these were for HD. And many of them didn’t need it as they’d bought a “European” Philips TV (actually an LG or Samsung in a different case) which had it built in, and they were paying at least €150 less for the telly than anyone in Europe would. And their leccy bill might also be harsh because they’ve built a gaming computer that has 2 x quad core, 2 x gfx and draws 1 800 W at 230V :laugh_at:
I remember when we first visited to Malaysia from the UK Dad took two full bags of photo equipment with, and came back with an extra one, and the other two stuffed to the brim with more film stock and alkaline batteries galore, both being considerably cheaper. As well as a transistor radio and various other small gadgets.#
Back then that would normally have got someone (especially a white man) pulled aside by Customs (there was duty payable on all of them) but they just thought “Oriental man with cameras, perfectly normal, straight through the green channel”) :laugh_at:”
I always knew Norway was up there, but i honestly thought that a few of the Arab nation would be, like Dubai etc. But Singapore? really?
I have a few friends who work in Norway, they always bring food from Denmark.
But you can earn a lot of money in Norway, so going there from Denmark is very profitable.
If you have an adress in Norway you can get child support for your kids even if they live in Denmark and that’s about £ 500 a month for each child.
Ahhhh……I have a cunning plan now……
@Angel 561703 wrote:
I have a few friends who work in Norway, they always bring food from Denmark.
But you can earn a lot of money in Norway, so going there from Denmark is very profitable.
If you have an adress in Norway you can get child support for your kids even if they live in Denmark and that’s about £ 500 a month for each child.
Exactly the same happens between Singapore and Malaysia; although to be fair food is one of the things that isn’t overly expensive in Singapore compared to SE Asia as a whole. Its just that everyone likes eating (it is claimed to be the national sport of both SG and MY and has the same respect attached to it as football (soccer) in the UK and NL).
0
Voices
9
Replies
Tags
This topic has no tags
Forums › Rave › Clubbing & Raving › Ravers! Can you help me out?