General living standards

Published: 31 January 2000 y., Monday
The survey was conducted by the U.S.-based William M. Mercer consulting company and released this past week. It was designed to help companies assess general living standards in cities where they may have employees, named Vancouver, Zurich, Vienna, Bern and Sydney as the cities with the highest quality of life in the world. Among the three Baltic cities, Vilnius ranked the highest, in 90th place—just below Prague, Jerusalem and Warsaw; Riga was just behind the Lithuanian capital in 91st place. Tallinn came in 106th. Kiev was in 159th place and Moscow, 162nd. The consulting company said they considered some 39 different criteria in coming up with their rankings, including levels of health care, the environment, political and economic stability, and nightlife. Among other cities ranked, were Helsinki in 9th place, Stockholm in 27th and London in 35th place. The four countries in last place were Baghdad, Khartoum, Pointe Noire and, in the 218th position, Brazzaville. Below is the full ranking list. New York was used as the baseline in the pointing system, with 100 points.
Šaltinis: Internet
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

HP Reports First Quarter 2009 Results

HP (NYSE:HPQ) today announced financial results for its first fiscal quarter ended Jan. 31, 2009, with net revenue of $28.8 billion, up 1% from a year earlier and up 4% when adjusted for the effects of currency. more »

California's golden dream turns gray

Saddled with an ongoing housing crisis, rising unemployment and an arguably flawed system of balancing the budget, California's "Golden dream" has turned a dismal shade of gray. more »

ATM security is top concern for U.S. consumers

ATM software provider Level Four Americas LLC found in a recent survey that 67 percent of U.S. adults who use financial institution with ATMs would be likely to switch FIs after an instance of ATM fraud or a data breach. more »

Recession affects Fashion Week

As designers put the finishing touches to their collections ahead of this year New York fashion week, the recession is on everyone's minds. more »

AB Bank SNORAS distributes the 11 per cent fixed-interest bond emission

On February 17 - March 13 this year, AB Bank SNORAS distributes one-year bonds with the fixed 11 per cent annual return, which can be regained after keeping the bonds for at least 28 days. more »

Looking upstream to fisheries reform

Europe's controversial fishing policy was under scrutiny Tuesday at a public hearing in Parliament about its future shape. more »

State aid: Commission approves Swedish scheme to recapitalise banks

The European Commission has approved, under EC Treaty state aid rules, a Swedish aid scheme intended to bolster the financing of the real economy by providing capital to banks. more »

Another Five Winners of the Danske Bankas Monthly Scholarship Award have been Announced

During the draw another five winners of the Danske Bankas monthly Scholarship award were announced. more »

Bank SNORAS gave 12 monetary prizes to the depositors who participated in the special action

In the special action of Bank SNORAS the participating depositors were presented 12 monetary prizes whose value reaches from 1 up to 50 thousand Litas. more »

Year-end Report 2008

Solid performance despite rapid economic slowdown. more »