On the 2nd week of August 2011, Economist Intelligence
Unit (EIU) published asurvey report on global livability. According to
this Global
livability survey, Melbourne of Australia was ranked as the best
place to live on earth. There is a restriction on reproducing the entire
or a part of the table of the rankings of the cities and that is why I cannot do it.
However, I can see that among the top ten ranked cities, all of them are from
rich countries like Australia, Canada, Finland and New Zealand.
Naturally, most people would want to know the top ten cities but I was
particularly interested to know about the condition of South Asian cities and I
could find all of them lying below 110 ranks out of 140 cities. In this blog
post, I am going to talk about the South Asian cities that were
present in this global livability survey.
Before that, it would be unfair if I do not say anything about the top
ten cities in the list. In fact, Australia has four in
the top ten while Canada has another three. In the second position is Vienna of Austria and
then there is Vancouver of Canada (3rdposition). You may wonder how
the U.S. or American cities did in the survey. On the 26th place
I could see Honolulu and then on the rank 30 was Pittsburgh. Paris (France) was
ranked 16th while Tokyo was 18th. In fact, as far as
I could see, the cities belonging to the rich countries or developed countries
dominated the first 50 positions.
About the methodology of the survey, I am giving an extract from
the press release so that you will be able to understand how they ranked and
rated the cities:
“Every city is assigned a rating of relative comfort
for over 30 qualitative and quantitative factors across five broad categories:
stability; healthcare; culture and environment; education; and
infrastructure. Each factor in a city is rated as acceptable, tolerable,
uncomfortable, undesirable or intolerable. For qualitative indicators, a rating
is awarded based on the judgment of in-house analysts and in-city contributors.
For quantitative indicators, a rating is calculated based on the relative
performance of a number of external data points.
The scores are then compiled and weighted to
provide a score of 1–100, where 1 is considered intolerable and 100 is
considered ideal. The liveability rating is provided both as an overall score and
as a score for each category. To provide points of reference, the score is
also given for each category relative to New York and an overall position in
the ranking of 140 cities is provided.”
As I said earlier, my main interest is to talk about the South Asian
cities. From India, there are two cities in this list and they are New Delhi
and Mumbai. New Delhi was ranked 112 while Mumbai was placed 116th.
Mumbai is the largest and the most populous city in India and it has a
huge population. In the list, most of the cities with huge population did
not do very well. Naturally, you cannot expect Mumbai to do well either because
whether you like it or not there are thousands of poor people living innot so ideal condition
in this city. However, I was a bit surprised and shocked to see the position of
New Delhi below in the list.
New Delhi is the capital of India and Indian government spend
a healthy amount of money to develop it. However, many people are still poor in
this place and they do not good access to good health care and education. At
the same time, infrastructure for New Delhi is not that good either or not up
to the world standard. Poor people do not have proper facilities and it is
perhaps shame for the capital city of a country like India whose
economy is now the second largest in Asia. Indian government has been
constantly claiming that India is shinning but it is shinning more for
the rich people. Things will not change overnight and millions of people are
still very poor in
India.
Pakistan had one city in the survey and it was Karachi.
Karachi is the largest and most populous city of Pakistan and again it has a
huge population. It was ranked 134th and only six cities
were after Karachi in the list. Again, I was not very shocked because Karachi
has several important problems. One of them is electricity. During summer,
people in this city suffer a lot from power shortage or load shedding.
Education and health care are limited for poor people. Infrastructure is not
good either as I have already mentioned acute electricity shortage during
summer. Perhaps the biggest problem for Karachi is lack of stability. Violence
is a natural part of life for many people here. We can see people getting
killed in Karachi on a regular basis from terrorism and sectarian violence.
Sri Lanka had Colombo ranked 129th position. Again, I am
not that much shocked because Sri Lanka suffered from civil war for a long
time. The infrastructure of the city is not world class either
and stability was always a key concern for many years. However, since civil war
has ended, I expect Colombo to climb up some positions in the next three to
five years.
Bangladeshi capital Dhaka was ranked 139th position and
it was just ahead of Zimbabwe’s Harare. So, according to the survey, Dhaka
is the second least livable city on earth. I live in Dhaka and I am not that
much shocked with this ranking because Dhaka is perhaps the most crowded city
on earth. Within one square kilometer hundreds of people live and
infrastructure is a key problem. Thousands of people are extremely poor and
many of them even do not have any home to live. Thousands of people live in the
streets and many of them are children. As far as health care is concerned,
there are not enough doctors and hospital beds for the fifteen to twenty
millions of people living in an around the city of the Dhaka.
Traffic jam is another big problem and sometimes patient die in the
ambulance stuck in a traffic jam. Unless the Bangladeshi government can
decentralize then the pressure on Dhaka will never end and Dhaka will
consistently be at the bottom of thesurvey.
Nepal’s capital Katmandu is ranked 128th. Nepal had been also
cursed with violenceand
political fighting for the last 10-15 years. So, there is a lot of pressure on
the Nepalese government to just maintain a country in a normal way. The
government surely cannot afford to spend a lot of money for the development of
capital Katmandu.
I cannot argue with the ranking of the South Asian cities
because I live in South Asia and I have been writing about South Asia for quite
a long time. In fact, I have been almost constantly blogging about South Asia
for nearly six years and that is why I really cannot argue with the findings
and ranking of Economic Intelligence Unit (EIU) in it as I know how bad the
condition of South Asian cities are. However, I think that they overlook some
smaller cities of the region.
One of them surely is Lahore and another is Bangalore. These two cities
are more comfortable and attractive to live in compared to the largest cities
like Mumbai and Karachi. On the other hand, I could see that smaller cities of
countries like Australia, New Zealand, or Canada have been included in the
list. This is the only shortcoming of this survey in my opinion.
I hope that in the coming years, Economist Intelligence Unit will try to take
smaller cities of South Asia into consideration while they make this survey report.
South Asian governments need to focus on developing the condition of the
largest cities. However, the government cannot do anything alone because many
people do not pay taxes properly. If citizens do not pay taxes properly then it
will be impossible for the government to get the necessary fund to improve
infrastructure, health care and education. Things will not change very soon for
South Asia. That is for sure.
The citizens should also try to become more aware and alert about the
condition of their own cities. They should not only pay taxes but also try to
have more collective and cooperative mentality. In many neighborhoods, the
citizens can donate some small amount of money and can surely try to set up a
good school or hospital. They can also donate some small amount of money and
ensure better safety and security and even take some initiatives to collect and
manage garbage more efficiently from the houses and from the streets. Unless
the people change in South Asia, the ranking will not change.
(this entry was first posted in September 2011 in another Blog)
(this entry was first posted in September 2011 in another Blog)
I can see that among the top ten ranked cities, all of them are from rich countries like Australia, Canada, Finland and New Zealand.
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