Index – Economy – It turned out how many of Budapest’s most livable cities were instructed
Mercer, a U.S. asset management company, ranks the world’s most expensive cities in terms of cost of living. The trustee listed a total of 400 cities according to the prices of two hundred factors, such as housing, food and household items, to help employers put together compensation packages. Only the ranking also shows where the employee’s salary can get the most out of 227 cities in the world.
In addition to the cost of living, the company also observed that the war in Ukraine, exchange rate fluctuations and inflation also reduced the wages and savings of working people.
THE Forbes he writes, the research also revealed that the dynamics between employees and employees also dropped, as they both realized that they did not have to be in an office to work efficiently, so the so-called “home office” became popular. And telecommuting can make those settlements attractive to those who work for a company located in a more expensive city.
And because of the rise in inflation that has not been seen for forty years, the question of where to live has risen several times over.
The ten most expensive cities in the world:
- Hong Kong
- Zurich (Switzerland)
- Geneva (Switzerland)
- Basel (Switzerland)
- Bern (Switzerland)
- Tel Aviv (Israel)
- New York (United States)
- Singapore (Singapore)
- Tokyo (Japan)
- Beijing (China)
The ten cheapest cities in the world:
- Algeria (Algeria)
- Almaty (Kazakhstan)
- Tunis (Tunisia)
- Tashkent (Uzbekistan)
- Istanbul (Turkey)
- Karachi (Pakistan)
- Islamabad (Pakistan)
- Dushanbe (Tajikistan)
- Bishkek (Kyrgyzstan)
- Ankara (Turkey)
In the list of 227 world cities, Budapest, the capital of Hungary, is ranked 180th.
(Cover image: The illuminated Margaret Bridge in the evening panorama of the capital. Photo: Csaba Jászai / MTI)