Best cities to live in.

exile_ch

Member
Gnarton style:

CNN)
-- It's famous for its rich cultural history, a

waltz and Wiener schnitzel. And for the third year in a row, Vienna,

Austria, can also boast the highest quality of living in the world.

According to the Mercer 2011 Quality of Living survey, Vienna beat 220 other cities to earn the distinction.

Zurich, Switzerland, ranked second, followed by Auckland, New Zealand.

Vancouver, Canada (No. 5) topped cities in the Americas; Dubai,

United Arab Emirates (No. 74) is ranked the best city in the Middle East

and Africa; and Singapore (No. 25) beat all other Asian cities

surveyed.

Baghdad ranked last, under Bangui, Central African Republic; N'Djamena, Chad; and Port-au-Prince, Haiti.

Mercer scored the cities based on 39 criteria, including

relationships with other countries, traffic congestion, schools,

climate, recreational activities, internal stability and economic

factors.

More than half of the top 25 cities are in Europe.

"European cities in general continue to have high standards of living

because they enjoy advanced and modern city infrastructures combined

with high-class medical, recreational and leisure facilities," said

Slagin Parakatil, senior researcher at Mercer. "But economic turmoil,

high levels of unemployment and lack of confidence in political

institutions make their future positions hard to predict."

The three top-ranking U.S. cities are Honolulu (No. 29), San Francisco (No. 30) and Boston (No. 36).

Mercer's survey is intended to help governments and international companies compensate employees working abroad.

The cities were also ranked by personal safety, based on crime, the effectiveness of law enforcement and other factors.

Luxembourg City ranked highest in personal safety. Three cities tied

for second place: Bern, Switzerland; Helsinki, Finland; and Zurich.

Baghdad also sits at the bottom of the personal safety list, just

under N'Djamena, Chad (No. 220); Abidjan, Cote d'Ivoire (No. 219); and

Bangui, Central African Republic (No. 218).

"The top-ranking cities for personal safety and security are in

politically stable countries with good international relations and

relatively sustainable economic growth," Parakatil said. "Most of the

low-scoring cities are in countries with civil unrest, high crime levels

and little law enforcement."

No U.S. city made the top 50 list for personal safety.

inb4 eheath "nice copy and paste"

 
no one actually lives in Banff...

they just come, drink their complimentary shrimp cocktails, and leave...
 
Followed the discussion on CNN and can see why many Americans were upset/confused about the results. The study favors European characteristics. Take public transport as an example. For Europeans, it's an easy, highly available and rather inexpensive measure of getting around. For Americans, it's restrictive and apparently takes away your personal freedom that only a car can give you.Same for supermarkets. One comment read: "Go to an american grocery store and look at the choices you have." This seems to be of high value. Europeans can't or don't want to understand this. "Why would you want to choose which of these 23 processed lasagnes you cram down your throat" would be a common answer.

So yeah - pretty useless report.
 
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