Singapore is ranked the best place for expats for the second year in a row, in a new survey.
Expats in Singapore enjoy some of the world’s best financial rewards and career opportunities, while benefiting from an excellent quality of life and a safe, family-friendly environment, found HSBC’s Expat Explorer country league table.
More than three in five expats in Singapore say it is a good place to progress their career, with the same proportion seeing their earnings rise after moving to the country (compared with 43% and 42% respectively of expats globally).
The average annual income for expats in Singapore is US$139,000 (compared with US$97,000 across the world), while nearly a quarter earn more than US$200,000 (more than twice the global expat average of 11%).
Overall, two-thirds of expats agree that Singapore offers a better quality of life than their home country (compared to 52% of expats globally), while three-quarters say the quality of education in Singapore is better than at home, the highest proportion in the world (global average 43%).
The survey also found that nearly a quarter of expats aged 18-34 moved abroad to find more purpose in their career.
This compares to 14% of those aged 34-54 and only 7% of those aged 55 and over.
Millennials are also the most likely to embrace expat life in search of a new challenge: more than two in five say this, compared with 38% of those aged 34-54 and only 30% of those aged 55 and over.
Millennials are finding the purpose they seek, with almost half reporting that they are more fulfilled at work than they were in their home country.
Far from slowing progress towards their longer term financial goals, expats find many are fast tracked by life abroad.
Around two-in-five expats say that moving abroad has accelerated their progress towards saving for retirement or towards buying a property, compared to around one in five whose move abroad has slowed their progress towards these financial goals.
Almost a third of expats say living abroad has helped them to save towards their children’s education more quickly, compared to only 15% who say it has slowed them down.