Gulf News

Dubai cheaper but expats have options

Emirate ranked third on list of cities in terms of expenses, with Jakarta, Buenos Aires among the most affordable

- BY SIDDESH SURESH MAYENKAR Senior Reporter

Dubai is cheaper to live in than the likes of Geneva and Brussels, but expats may want to move to Jakarta or Buenos Aires if they need a less expensive domicile, according to a recent UBS study.

Ranked third on a list of cities for expats in terms of expenses, the emirate is 39 per cent cheaper compared to Geneva, Switzerlan­d, on a monthly basis when it comes to basic expenses such as food, household goods and clothing.

Geneva, the costliest city, had average monthly basic expenses of $2,099 (Dh7,708), compared to Dubai’s $1,311.

However, Dubai was costlier, at $4,546 per month, when it came to the extra expenses that an expat incurs, in this case a two-bedroom furnished apartment and tuition at an internatio­nal school for children.

The study found that an expat in Buenos Aires, Argentina, would pay 50 per cent of the basic expenses of what an expat in Geneva would pay.

Cities like Jakarta and Mumbai were listed as some of the cheaper places to live for an expat, with average monthly basic expenses of $1,098, nearly half of Geneva’s tally, and extra expenses of $1,240 per month, 70 per cent cheaper than the costliest city.

As far as savings are concerned, a recent survey by National Bonds found that more people plan to increase their savings compared to what they put away in 2017.

Investment opportunit­ies

About 57 per cent plan to increase their savings in 2018, with about 40 per cent harbouring plans to start saving from this year. Asked why they felt it was a good time to save, close to 43 per cent of UAE residents cited the existence of better investment opportunit­ies, while 85 per cent said they believed they were not putting away enough for their future compared to 89 per cent in 2016.

Elsewhere in the Gulf region, 42 per cent of respondent­s in Saudi Arabia were very positive about the present environmen­t for savings, compared to 30 per cent in the UAE and 30 per cent in other GCC countries.

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