Vienna remains at the top of the ranking of the most liveable cities in the world, Paris in 21st place

Vienna remains at the top of the ranking of the most liveable cities in the world, Paris in 21st place
Vienna remains at the top of the ranking of the most liveable cities in the world, Paris in 21st place

Vienna once again wins the title of most pleasant city in the world, with the city of Tel Aviv showing the biggest drop due to the war between Israel and the Islamist movement Hamas, according to an annual report published Thursday.

Already at the top in 2018 and 2019, the Austrian capital, with its green spaces, its beautiful cultural offering and its quality services, has regained the lead in 2022 in this ranking produced by The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), the research unit and analysis affiliated with the British weekly, and has not left it since.

It is followed in the top ten by Copenhagen in Denmark, Swiss cities (Zurich, Geneva), Australian (Melbourne, Sydney), Canadian (Calgary) and even Japanese (Osaka).

Paris has moved up slightly, ranking 21st, tied with Berlin, while New York is virtually stationary (70th). Moscow is ranked 98th.

“Marginal” improvement

While the quality of life has improved on average across the world, “this improvement is marginal due to geopolitical conflicts, social unrest and a housing crisis,” the study notes.

In the Middle East, Tel Aviv plunged twenty places (112th) following the unprecedented bloody attack carried out on October 7 by Hamas in southern Israel. In response, the Israeli army launched a large-scale offensive in the Gaza Strip.

The Russian invasion of Ukraine keeps kyiv in the depths of the ranking (165th), while the Syrian city of Damascus, devastated by thirteen years of civil war, remains the least welcoming city in the world.

Europe has seen its stability affected by the increase in demonstrations “in various areas”, against the rise of the extreme right, the EU’s agricultural policy or immigration, notes the EIU.

The study covers 173 cities, evaluated on the basis of thirty criteria in the following areas: stability, health system, culture and environment, education, infrastructure.

-

-

PREV SIMON BÉRARD, Madeleine | The Quebec Journal
NEXT GAGNON, Pierrette Mathieu | The Quebec Journal