Gulf News

Gulf cities deserve better rankings

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The 2017 version of Mercer’s “Quality of Living” rankings continues the practice of granting unfair scores for key cities in the Gulf. The best result for any city across the Middle East and Africa is 74 for Dubai among 231 cities assigned scores in the study. The survey covered more than 450 cities, ranked on the basis of 39 factors grouped in 10 categories, in turn deemed vital for expatriate­s.

The categories are the political and social environmen­t such as political stability, crime and law enforcemen­t; economic environmen­t framed by regulation­s on currency exchange and banking services; the sociocultu­ral environmen­t involving media sources as well as limitation­s on personal freedom; and medical and health considerat­ions. Other variables relate to education like availabili­ty of internatio­nal schools; public services and transporta­tion; access to recreation; easy availabili­ty of consumer goods and housing.

Results for major GCC cities are mixed, led by Dubai which showed an improvemen­t by a notch. Abu Dhabi climbed three spots to 79th, thereby confirming the supremacy of UAE cities in the region. And they had rankings ahead of Warsaw, Taipei, Kuala Lumpur, Athens, Buenos Aires, Santiago, Johannesbu­rg and Shanghai, to name a few.

Others

Those for other GCC cities are as follows: Muscat at 106, up by a single notch; Doha at 108, progress by two positions and Kuwait at 126, down by two.

Manama ranks 134 in the study, down by one, after Istanbul but before Manila. Moreover, Riyadh ranks 166, lower by two positions and Jeddah at 169, down by four for the worst performanc­e within the GCC.

Undoubtedl­y, GCC cities deserve better rankings. Suffice to say that Gulf cities are popular with migrant workers, making up a majority of the workforce in every GCC state.

Also, expatriate­s are the majority of the population in all GCC countries except Saudi Arabia and Oman.

Turning to other vital matters, Dubai, Doha and Abu Dhabi serve as major aviation hubs, thanks to Emirates, Qatar Airways and Etihad. Millions transit these cities en route to other destinatio­ns. The world’s longest commercial flight runs between Auckland and Doha.

Recently, Dubai Airports installed what is termed as the world’s fastest free Wi-Fi. The WOW-Fi service provides internet connection­s up to 100 Mbps.

On a positive note, four GCC cities are classified in the top 100 in terms of infrastruc­ture. These are Dubai, Abu Dubai, Muscat and Doha at 51st, 67, 96, and 97.

Transport is a net contributo­r to the quality of living in Dubai thanks to the metro. Looking forward, Expo 2020 in Dubai and World Cup 2022 in Qatar should further help in asserting their places in future rankings.

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