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Worldwide Cost of Living 2021: HK ranks 5th most expensive city to live in

(File Photo) Hong Kong ranks the fifth most expensive city to live in according to the Worldwide Cost of Living 2021 report. (DotDotNews)

Israel's Tel Aviv has surpassed Hong Kong and Singapore to become the world's most expensive city to live in, according to the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU).

The Israeli city climbed from fifth place last year to top the Worldwide Cost of Living 2021 report for the first time, pushing Paris down to joint second place with Singapore. Zurich and Hong Kong rounded out the top five.

The soaring shekel and price increases for goods including groceries and transport were the main factors in Tel Aviv taking the top spot, according to the EIU.

It said prices for goods and services studied across cities had risen 3.5 percent year-on-year in local currency terms, compared with 1.9 percent last year.

The inflation rate was the fastest recorded for the past five years. Cost increases were biggest for transport as higher oil prices boosted the price of unleaded petrol by 21 percent.

Elsewhere, Rome saw the biggest drop in the ranking from 32nd to 48th place while Tehran leaped from 79th to 29th place after the reimposition of US sanctions on Iran. Hong Kong had the most expensive petrol prices, at $2.50 per liter.

The Syrian capital of Damascus remains the world's cheapest city.

Upasana Dutt, head of worldwide cost of living at EIU, said in a statement, "Although most economies across the world are now recovering as COVID-19 vaccines are rolled out, many major cities are still seeing spikes in cases, leading to social restrictions. These have disrupted the supply of goods, leading to shortages and higher prices."

The Worldwide Cost of Living is a twice-yearly survey conducted by EIU that compares more than 400 individual prices across 200 products and services in 173 cities.

The top 10 most expensive cities are as follows: Tel Aviv, Paris and Singapore (joint second), Zurich, Hong Kong, New York, Geneva, Copenhagen, Los Angeles, Osaka.

(Source: Bloomberg)

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