India’s IT hub Bangalore and Pakistan’s financial capital Karachi have emerged as the world’s cheapest cities to live in, according to a new global survey.
The Worldwide Cost of Living
is a twice yearly Economist Intelligence Unit survey that compares more
than 400 individual prices across 160 products and services. These
include food, drink, clothing, household supplies and personal care
items, home rents, transport, utility bills, private schools, domestic
help and recreational costs.
FOR YOUR TICKETING AND RESERVATIONS, VACATION PACKAGE
VISA ADVISORY, CORPORATE AND GROUP TOUR
CALL OUR DESK:+2348034708980
EMAIL US:- info@linksandtours.net
bookings@linksandtours.net
VISA ADVISORY, CORPORATE AND GROUP TOUR
CALL OUR DESK:+2348034708980
EMAIL US:- info@linksandtours.net
bookings@linksandtours.net
The sub-continent as a whole offers the
best value for money, with Mumbai, Chennai and New Delhi also being
ranked on the lower end.
Bangalore shares the lowest rank on the
list with Karachi followed by Mumbai at 130, Chennai at 129 and New
Delhi at 128 on a list topped by Singapore for being the most expensive
for the second consecutive year.
It heads an unchanged top five compared
to last year, joined by Paris, Oslo, Zurich and Sydney. Geneva,
Copenhagen, Frankfurt and Helsinki complete the top 10.
London, comes in as 11th-most expensive
place, and is now as pricey as Tokyo, which was replaced by Singapore as
the most expensive city last year.
Relative stability at the top of the
rankings is in contrast to significant fluctuations lower down,
especially relating to exchange rate weakness.
Caracas, in Venezuela, falls 124 places, from 6th last year to 4th from bottom now.
Conversely, Seoul, in South Korea, is rising quickly up the rankings. Ranked 50th five years ago, it is now in top 10.
Kiev has fallen 38 places over the past 12 months owing to the impact of the war in Ukraine.
The slide in the Russian rouble means
that the ranked position of Moscow and St Petersburg would put both
cities among the bottom 10 if current exchange rates were applied.