Singapore ranked most liveable city for Asian expats for 14th straight year
SINGAPORE is the most liveable city for Asian expats for the 14th year in a row, according to a survey by human resources consultancy ECA International.
Lee Quane, Asia regional director for ECA International, said: "Several factors make Singapore the ideal location, such as access to great facilities, low crime rates, good quality healthcare and education, as well as a large expat population already living in Singapore.
"Although many cities in Asia offer similar benefits to overseas workers, Singapore remains the top location, and it does not look like it will drop in the rankings any time soon."
Hong Kong slid 12 places to joint 41st, after disruption and damage caused by Typhoon Mangkhut in September 2018. While there was no loss of life, ECA noted that the cost of damage to buildings and infrastructure amounted to an estimated US$1 billion.
Air pollution saw the territory fall to 29th place in 2017 and 28th in 2016, accelerating Hong Kong's steady slide since its best showing at 11th place in 2013.
In contrast, Chinese cities like Beijing, Nanjing and Xiamen have been rising in the liveability rankings on rapid improvements to infrastructure, despite excessive levels of air pollution negatively impacting the quality of life. ECA noted that Chinese authorities in recent years have introduced measures to combat air pollution, which have translated into improvements in their rankings.
The majority of Malaysian and Thai locations also rose in the liveability rankings. Bangkok was the highest rated Thai city at 89th place, whilst George Town and Kuala Lumpur rose to 97th and 98th respectively.
Outside of Asia, cities in Australia and New Zealand offered the best quality of living for Asian workers, with Brisbane and Sydney joint second in the rankings.
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
International
China’s central bank adds more gold to its reserves in April
Wall Street bonuses to rise this year as deals return, says report
Bank of Japan to scrutinise yen moves in guiding policy: Governor Ueda
A look back on three decades of change in liner shipping
Apac finance M&A to stay subdued after Q1 decline as uncertainties linger: S&P Global
German factory orders drop in sign of enduring weakness