Dublin drops out of world's 20 most expensive cities due to falling rents

A cost of living survey ranks Dublin as the 25th most expensive of 143 cities, a drop of nine places since 2008

A cost of living survey ranks Dublin as the 25th most expensive of 143 cities, a drop of nine places since 2008

DUBLIN HAS dropped out of the world’s top 20 most expensive cities due to falling rents and the recovery of the dollar, according to a survey released yesterday.

The Worldwide Cost of Living Survey (2009), conducted by consultants Mercer, ranked Dublin as the 25th most expensive of 143 cities, a drop of nine places since 2008.

It found the average cost of renting a two-bed luxury apartment in Dublin was €1,300 a month, compared with €4,227 a month in Tokyo, the most expensive city.

READ MORE

The cost of living in London has also fallen as the city fell from third to 16th due to the weakness of sterling. The cost of renting an equivalent flat there was €2,704, a month.

A cup of coffee in Dublin costs €3 on average, which is more than in London, Rome, Amsterdam, Madrid or Vancouver, but less than New York where it costs $4.90 (€3.43).

The analysis is conducted by Mercer to help multinational companies estimate pay rates for international employees.

The annual survey uses New York City as a benchmark for comparing the prices of more than 200 items, including housing, food, transport and entertainment.

A survey of quality of living conducted by Mercer earlier this year also ranked Dublin at 25th, although this placed it ahead of Tokyo, London, New York, Barcelona and Paris.

The relatively stronger dollar means it is now more expensive for companies based in Europe to send staff to work in cities in the US, according to Mercer.

Tokyo was given an index score of 143.7 points, meaning it is nearly three times as costly a city to live in as Johannesburg, ranked 143rd with a score of 49.6. Dublin’s index score was 87.4.

Five of the top 10 ranked cities are in Asia, with Beijing climbing 11 places to ninth spot, one above Singapore, which rose from 13th. Hong Kong gained one place to fifth.

Switzerland and Japan each had two cities in the top 10.

The weakness of sterling led to some steep falls for British cities, with Glasgow and Birmingham falling 60 and 59 places respectively, to 129th and 125th in the rankings.

Many Middle Eastern cities climbed in this year’s rankings as the United Arab Emirates dirham is fixed to the US dollar.

Dubai rose to 20th place from 52nd and Abu Dhabi advanced to 26th position from 65th. Tel Aviv was the most expensive city in the Middle East, although it fell to 17th from 14th in the rankings.

David Labanyi

David Labanyi

David Labanyi is the Head of Audience with The Irish Times