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BEIJING, June 22 -- Quick, which is more expensive,
Beijing or Shanghai?
Take a taxi in Shanghai and you will pay more than you would for a ride of equal distance in Beijing. Buy a beer at an international bar in Shanghai, and the same holds true. Go out
for an Italian, German or French meal and ditto.
And yet, according to a survey released yesterday by
Mercer Human Resources Consulting, Beijing is the most expensive city on the
Chinese mainland.
"There are some things that might be more expensive
in Shanghai, but the index we have is based on a basket of goods," said Ilya
Bonick, Mercer's regional head of information services. Mercer's cost of living
survey is one of a handful of annual reports produced by international
consultants. It takes into consideration such things as housing, food,
entertainment, clothing, household goods and transportation.
Meals of noodles or jiaozi are not included in the
report whereas products expatriates are likely to buy and are available in all
the cities surveyed, such as Coca-Cola and Pantene shampoo, are.
Mercer found Beijing to be the 19th most expensive
city in the world.
Shanghai came in at No 30.
The results fly in the face of traditional wisdom.
"It surprised me," said Vanessa Cen, a headhunter
with Talent Shanghai, a local company. "My feeling is that, on the Chinese
mainland, Shanghai and Shenzhen are more expensive than Beijing."
Every city in the country was lower in ranking than
in 2004, when Beijing came in at No 11 and Shanghai 16.
This year, Hong Kong, the most expensive Chinese
city, took ninth spot. The top three in the world are Tokyo, Osaka and London.
The good news for multinationals with expatriate
employees is that Chinese cities are getting cheaper, driven by a US dollar
depreciating in value.
"Chinese cities have dropped significantly in the
rankings as the currency is pegged to the US dollar and has therefore been
affected by the dollar's depreciation," said Marie-Laurence Sepede, Mercer's
research manager, in a release.
"The shift in the China ranking is the most
surprising," Bonick said. "We have seen it become more affordable." Another
factor for the drop, said Bonick, is the wider availability of products the
company uses to measure.
"In Shanghai and Beijing, there's more competition in
the market and therefore prices go down."
Other Chinese cities such as Guangzhou and Shenzhen
are further down the list and did not make the top 50.
"Beijing is about 10 per cent higher than Guangzhou
in terms of cost," said Bonick.
Despite the difference between the two cities'
ranking, in real terms the difference in the cost of placing an expatriate in
Shanghai or Beijing is around the 2 per cent mark, he said. According to Mercer,
South America is currently the most affordable place, with the capital of
Paraguay, Asuncion, coming in dead last. Enditem
(Source: China Daily) |