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Something that you will never see the gahment in Sinkeepoo brag about...

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With 'consistently high cost of living', Singapore ranked world's most expensive city for 8th time in a decade: Survey​

People sitting next to a pond with a view of Singapore's business district.
AFP
People sitting next to a pond with a view of Singapore's business district.
Follow us on Instagram and Tiktok, and join our Telegram channel for the latest updates.
  • Singapore has tied with New York to share the top spot on EIU's index of the world's most expensive cities
  • This is the eighth time within a decade that Singapore has ranked first
  • EIU said Singapore has faced a consistently high cost of living
  • Singapore also has a tendency to rank highly due to its strong currency

BY

LOW YOUJIN

Published December 1, 2022
Updated December 1, 2022
WhatsAppTelegramFacebookTwitterEmailLinkedIn
SINGAPORE — Singapore has tied with America’s New York to share the unwanted title of being the most expensive city to live in, the latest Worldwide Cost of Living index showed.
Results of the survey by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), which were released on Thursday (Dec 1), showed that a combination of high incomes and a strong exchange rate propelled both financial hubs to the top of the list.

While this is the first time New York has topped the rankings, it is the eighth time for Singapore in the past decade.
Last year’s top spot was held by Israel’s Tel Aviv, with Singapore sharing the second position with France’s capital, Paris. New York was ranked sixth.

CITY RANKINGS FOR 2022​

TOP 10 POSITIONS
1. Singapore
1. New York, United States
3. Tel Aviv, Israel
4. Hong Kong, special administrative region of China
4. Los Angeles, US
6. Zurich, Switzerland
7. Geneva, Switzerland
8. San Francisco, US
9. Paris, France
10. Copenhagen, Denmark
10. Sydney, Australia
BOTTOM 10 POSITIONS
161. Colombo, Sri Lanka
161. Bangalore, India
161. Algiers, Algeria
164. Chennai, India
165. Ahmedabad, India
166. Almaty, Kazakhstan
167. Karachi, Pakistan
168. Tashkent, Uzbekistan
169. Tunis, Tunisia
170. Tehran, Iran
171. Tripoli, Libya
172. Damascus, Syria
Expand to view
The bi-annual survey, conducted between Aug 16 and Sept 16 this year, compares more than 400 individual prices across more than 200 products and services in 172 cities.

READ ALSO​

TODAY Youth Survey: Cost of living main source of mental health struggles, amid worries over healthcare and everyday expenses


EIU — the research and analysis division of the Economist Group, which also manages the Economist newspaper — said that the survey has been designed to enable human resources and finance managers to calculate cost-of-living allowances and build compensation packages for expatriates and business travellers.
The Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI) said in December last year, after the release of EIU’s previous report, that the results “may not reflect the cost of living of Singaporean households”.

For instance, it said that the EIU consumption basket includes items such as international foreign daily newspapers that tend to be more expensive than what Singaporean households typically consume, such as Singapore's newspapers.
In response to TODAY's queries, Ms Upasana Dutt, head of Worldwide Cost of Living at EIU, said on Thursday that its survey includes products and services, which are common all across the cities in order to provide standardisation and direct city-to-city comparisons.
These include categories such as food, drinks, clothing, household supplies and personal care items, home rent, and transport, she added.
Last year, MTI said that EIU’s survey findings were compiled by comparing the prices of goods and services across countries and converting them from their domestic currencies to US dollars.

READ ALSO​

The Big Read: Young couples delaying plans to marry, buy property or have kids amid red-hot inflation, but at what cost?


“This means that the rankings are sensitive to currency fluctuations. However, currency fluctuations have less impact on the cost of living of Singaporeans who earn their income in Singapore dollars,” MTI said then.


‘CONSISTENTLY HIGH COST OF LIVING’

Commenting on its latest findings for Singapore, EIU said that the country has faced a consistently high cost of living.
“The city-state has the world’s highest transport prices, owing to strict government controls on car numbers. It is also among the most expensive cities for clothing, alcohol and tobacco, thanks to its success as a premier location for business investment,” the company added.
And because of Singapore’s strong currency, it has a tendency of ranking highly on EIU’s index.
EIU said that prices are higher when expressed in international common currency, while structural factors such as competition or high demand play a key role in determining the cost of living as well.
It added that because it converts domestic currency prices into US dollars to calculate each city’s index, EIU’s rankings are also driven by exchange rates against the dollar.

READ ALSO​

New York, Singapore top 'world's costliest city' survey


Ms Dutt said that as compared to other currencies, the Singapore dollar depreciated relatively less, which caused the city to stay as one of the most expensive.
Beyond Singapore’s strong currency, EIU also pointed to high inflation, which has led to the cost of living soaring in the world’s major cities as war in Ukraine and continuing Covid-19 pandemic restrictions disrupt supply chains, particularly for energy and food.
On average, EIU said that prices have risen by 8.1 per cent in local-currency terms, the highest rate in the 20 years for which the firm has collected digital data.
Utility and food prices have increased sharply in the midst of trade restrictions caused in part by the Ukraine war, but petrol prices have seen the most rapid increases, it added.
The firm found that the price of a litre of petrol has risen by 22 per cent year-on-year on average in local-currency terms at a time of higher global oil prices and a stronger US dollar.
Separately, prices for gas and electricity saw a global average increase of 11 per cent, compared to the 29 per cent on average in local-currency terms in western European cities as the region tries to wean itself off Russian energy.
Despite the relatively bleak outlook, EIU said that “prices may be starting to ease” in some countries as interest rates bite and the global economy slows. Supply-chain blockages should also start to ease as freight rates come down and demand softens.
“Unless the war in Ukraine escalates, we predict that commodity prices for energy, food and for supplies such as metals are likely to fall sharply in 2023 compared with 2022 levels, although they are likely to stay higher than previous levels.”
Overall, EIU forecasts that global consumer price inflation will fall from an average of 9.4 per cent this year to a still-high 6.5 per cent in 2023.
TODAY has sought comment from MTI regarding EIU’s latest report.
 
This is expected for a money laundering hub... similar to Switzerland.

All that money coming in, it is not stored in a vacuum. It will permeate the economy of the country, and express itself in various ways. :wink:
 
Something is clearly wrong when a city is ranked the most expensive in 8 out of 10 years....
 
Something is clearly wrong when a city has m0re than 80 mpS and those in-charge can change erectoral boundary at whim.
 
Something is clearly wrong when a city is ranked the most expensive in 8 out of 10 years....
Something is wrong if biznes charge prices customers cannot pay. Can't a ford? U r the problem. :cool:
 
So for those who try to hao lian about their house, their car, their everything.... The jokes on them. They would have gotten a whole lot more in other countries. :biggrin:
 
hubris for hub. sinkie garment has been promoting sg as both an investment and family trust depository safe haven (and hub) for decades. they’ve been bragging about it and spending ad and media dollars promoting biomedical hub this, crypto hub that, financial hub here, banking hub there, infocomm hub everywhere. where got shy and silent? no wonder all family trusts, trysts, thrusts with at least $69m in the region look to sg first as a safe haven to park their wealth, some of which are ill-gotten gains from their fucked up cuntries. the result and repercussion (of being sextremely sexpensive) are well anticipated and constipated. only low ses sinkies are clueless as to what hit them as they are preoccupied with boliao shit on a daily basis, like frogs in water on slow boil.
 
Last edited:
hubris for hub. sinkie garment has been promoting sg as both an investment and family trust depository safe haven (and hub) for decades. they’ve been bragging about it and spending ad and media dollars promoting biomedical hub this, crypto hub that, financial hub here, banking hub there, infocomm hub everywhere. where got shy and silent? no wonder all family trusts, trysts, thrusts with at least $69m in the region look to sg first as a safe haven to park their wealth, some of which are ill-gotten gains from their fucked up cuntries. the result and repercussion (of being sextremely sexpensive) are well anticipated and constipated. only low ses sinkies are clueless as to what hits them as they are preoccupied with boliao shit on a daily basis, like frogs in water on slow boil.
yah it's true
many rich foreigners here to jackup coe and housing prices
for pinkie u want to live in singapura u need $5k a month for a decent basic living
 
yah it's true
many rich foreigners here to jackup coe and housing prices
for pinkie u want to live in singapura u need $5k a month for a decent basic living
now at least $6.9k a month for indecent living.
 

With 'consistently high cost of living', Singapore ranked world's most expensive city for 8th time in a decade: Survey​

People sitting next to a pond with a view of Singapore's business district.'s business district.
AFP
People sitting next to a pond with a view of Singapore's business district.
Follow us on Instagram and Tiktok, and join our Telegram channel for the latest updates.
  • Singapore has tied with New York to share the top spot on EIU's index of the world's most expensive cities
  • This is the eighth time within a decade that Singapore has ranked first
  • EIU said Singapore has faced a consistently high cost of living
  • Singapore also has a tendency to rank highly due to its strong currency

BY

LOW YOUJIN

Published December 1, 2022
Updated December 1, 2022
WhatsAppTelegramFacebookTwitterEmailLinkedIn
SINGAPORE — Singapore has tied with America’s New York to share the unwanted title of being the most expensive city to live in, the latest Worldwide Cost of Living index showed.
Results of the survey by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), which were released on Thursday (Dec 1), showed that a combination of high incomes and a strong exchange rate propelled both financial hubs to the top of the list.

While this is the first time New York has topped the rankings, it is the eighth time for Singapore in the past decade.
Last year’s top spot was held by Israel’s Tel Aviv, with Singapore sharing the second position with France’s capital, Paris. New York was ranked sixth.

CITY RANKINGS FOR 2022​

TOP 10 POSITIONS
1. Singapore
1. New York, United States
3. Tel Aviv, Israel
4. Hong Kong, special administrative region of China
4. Los Angeles, US
6. Zurich, Switzerland
7. Geneva, Switzerland
8. San Francisco, US
9. Paris, France
10. Copenhagen, Denmark
10. Sydney, Australia
BOTTOM 10 POSITIONS
161. Colombo, Sri Lanka
161. Bangalore, India
161. Algiers, Algeria
164. Chennai, India
165. Ahmedabad, India
166. Almaty, Kazakhstan
167. Karachi, Pakistan
168. Tashkent, Uzbekistan
169. Tunis, Tunisia
170. Tehran, Iran
171. Tripoli, Libya
172. Damascus, Syria
Expand to view
The bi-annual survey, conducted between Aug 16 and Sept 16 this year, compares more than 400 individual prices across more than 200 products and services in 172 cities.

READ ALSO​

TODAY Youth Survey: Cost of living main source of mental health struggles, amid worries over healthcare and everyday expenses


EIU — the research and analysis division of the Economist Group, which also manages the Economist newspaper — said that the survey has been designed to enable human resources and finance managers to calculate cost-of-living allowances and build compensation packages for expatriates and business travellers.
The Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI) said in December last year, after the release of EIU’s previous report, that the results “may not reflect the cost of living of Singaporean households”.

For instance, it said that the EIU consumption basket includes items such as international foreign daily newspapers that tend to be more expensive than what Singaporean households typically consume, such as Singapore's newspapers.
In response to TODAY's queries, Ms Upasana Dutt, head of Worldwide Cost of Living at EIU, said on Thursday that its survey includes products and services, which are common all across the cities in order to provide standardisation and direct city-to-city comparisons.
These include categories such as food, drinks, clothing, household supplies and personal care items, home rent, and transport, she added.
Last year, MTI said that EIU’s survey findings were compiled by comparing the prices of goods and services across countries and converting them from their domestic currencies to US dollars.

READ ALSO​

The Big Read: Young couples delaying plans to marry, buy property or have kids amid red-hot inflation, but at what cost?


“This means that the rankings are sensitive to currency fluctuations. However, currency fluctuations have less impact on the cost of living of Singaporeans who earn their income in Singapore dollars,” MTI said then.


‘CONSISTENTLY HIGH COST OF LIVING’

Commenting on its latest findings for Singapore, EIU said that the country has faced a consistently high cost of living.
“The city-state has the world’s highest transport prices, owing to strict government controls on car numbers. It is also among the most expensive cities for clothing, alcohol and tobacco, thanks to its success as a premier location for business investment,” the company added.
And because of Singapore’s strong currency, it has a tendency of ranking highly on EIU’s index.
EIU said that prices are higher when expressed in international common currency, while structural factors such as competition or high demand play a key role in determining the cost of living as well.
It added that because it converts domestic currency prices into US dollars to calculate each city’s index, EIU’s rankings are also driven by exchange rates against the dollar.

READ ALSO​

New York, Singapore top 'world's costliest city' survey


Ms Dutt said that as compared to other currencies, the Singapore dollar depreciated relatively less, which caused the city to stay as one of the most expensive.
Beyond Singapore’s strong currency, EIU also pointed to high inflation, which has led to the cost of living soaring in the world’s major cities as war in Ukraine and continuing Covid-19 pandemic restrictions disrupt supply chains, particularly for energy and food.
On average, EIU said that prices have risen by 8.1 per cent in local-currency terms, the highest rate in the 20 years for which the firm has collected digital data.
Utility and food prices have increased sharply in the midst of trade restrictions caused in part by the Ukraine war, but petrol prices have seen the most rapid increases, it added.
The firm found that the price of a litre of petrol has risen by 22 per cent year-on-year on average in local-currency terms at a time of higher global oil prices and a stronger US dollar.
Separately, prices for gas and electricity saw a global average increase of 11 per cent, compared to the 29 per cent on average in local-currency terms in western European cities as the region tries to wean itself off Russian energy.
Despite the relatively bleak outlook, EIU said that “prices may be starting to ease” in some countries as interest rates bite and the global economy slows. Supply-chain blockages should also start to ease as freight rates come down and demand softens.
“Unless the war in Ukraine escalates, we predict that commodity prices for energy, food and for supplies such as metals are likely to fall sharply in 2023 compared with 2022 levels, although they are likely to stay higher than previous levels.”
Overall, EIU forecasts that global consumer price inflation will fall from an average of 9.4 per cent this year to a still-high 6.5 per cent in 2023.
TODAY has sought comment from MTI regarding EIU’s latest report.
It is actually a big fat lie. Only housing & cars caused it to shoot to the no 1 spot. Food wise, public transport, household toiletries & groceries are still cheaper than European & Scandinavian countries. Fruits in Singapore such as papaya, bananas, honey dew, rock melon still cheaper than Japan, S Korea & Thailand.
 
Desirable cities are more expensive so the ranking proves that Singapore is the best place in the world to live.

If you want to live in a cheap city sinkies are welcome to choose one of the following :

161. Colombo, Sri Lanka
161. Bangalore, India
161. Algiers, Algeria
164. Chennai, India
165. Ahmedabad, India
166. Almaty, Kazakhstan
167. Karachi, Pakistan
168. Tashkent, Uzbekistan
169. Tunis, Tunisia
170. Tehran, Iran
171. Tripoli, Libya
172. Damascus, Syria
 
Fake news....our inflation rate is only 3%.
 
Desirable cities are more expensive so the ranking proves that Singapore is the best place in the world to live.

If you want to live in a cheap city sinkies are welcome to choose one of the following :

161. Colombo, Sri Lanka
161. Bangalore, India
161. Algiers, Algeria
164. Chennai, India
165. Ahmedabad, India
166. Almaty, Kazakhstan
167. Karachi, Pakistan
168. Tashkent, Uzbekistan
169. Tunis, Tunisia
170. Tehran, Iran
171. Tripoli, Libya
172. Damascus, Syria
These cities are from what some would call shithole countries
 
These cities are from what some would call shithole countries

My point exactly. A crap standard of living is cheap. A world class city is obviously expensive because everyone wants to live there.
 
It is actually a big fat lie. Only housing & cars caused it to shoot to the no 1 spot. Food wise, public transport, household toiletries & groceries are still cheaper than European & Scandinavian countries. Fruits in Singapore such as papaya, bananas, honey dew, rock melon still cheaper than Japan, S Korea & Thailand.
I don't think so.
 
Tired driving? Want a short break... Just find a deserted road to stop by for quick nap... $70 only
 
My point exactly. A crap standard of living is cheap. A world class city is obviously expensive because everyone wants to live there.
No anymore, they won't. People are wising up to the fact that they can get a better deal living somewhere else like Bangkok for example... :thumbsup:
 
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