Zurich tops list of best places to live, Baghdad last
CANBERRA (Reuters Life!) - Zurich in Switzerland has again come top of a list of 215 cities as the location with the best quality of living while Luxembourg was ranked the safest - and Baghdad, Iraq, came last on both counts.
Management consultancy Mercer said European cities dominated the top slots in its 2008 WorldWide Quality of Living Survey, with Zurich retaining its 2007 rank, followed by Vienna in Austria in second place while another Swiss city, Geneva, came third. The survey also has a second list ranking safety.
In fourth place was Vancouver, Canada, and Auckland, New Zealand, came fifth.
Germany also had three cities in the top 10 with Dusseldorf at number 6 and Munich and Frankfurt both at number 7. Prague was at number 71 the highest-ranking eastern European city and Minsk in Belarus the lowest ranking European city at number 183.
"Europe dominates the list in terms of infrastructure, health and political stability," a senior researcher from Mercer, Slagin Parakatil, said in a statement.
The rankings are based on 39 key quality-of-living determinants such as political stability, schooling, socio-cultural environment, recreation, housing and natural environment.
Honolulu was the highest entry for the United States coming in at number 28 followed by San Francisco at 29, Boston at 37, Chicago and Washington D.C. at 44 and New York at number 49.
The highest ranking for Britain was London, at number 38, while the Australian city which ranked highest was Sydney coming in at number 10.
In Asia, Singapore came highest, ranked number 32, two places above a year ago, and slightly higher than Japanese cities such as Tokyo, which came in 35th. Hong Kong and Beijing retained their 2007 rankings of 70 and 116 respectively. Continued...
One Year Later
A look back at the events of 26/11 ahead of the first anniversary of the militant attacks in Mumbai that killed 166 people. Slideshow | Full Coverage
India Investment Summit 2009
Top executives and bankers discuss their own plans and the broader opportunities and challenges for India. Full Coverage













