< %=imgalt%>
US Elections Calendar ~ Barak Obama ~ Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry ~ Other International News
Home / International News / Press Releases / November 18, 2008
ULI Launches Global City Index Report: London, New York Still Rank As World Leaders, But Face Competition From Other Global Cities

Top News

Praja Rajyam decides to approach court to vacate the stay on roadshows

Deshmukh meets Sonia Gandhi

Mumbai heroes who saved many lives

Travis Barker, disc jockey DJ AM to perform together

Mobile Koran launched in Israel

Proteas inexperience in Oz conditions will go against them: Ponting

Chemical reaction in landslide rocks may start wildfires

How cancer prevention drives aging

ULI Launches Global City Index Report: London, New York Still Rank As World Leaders, But Face Competition From Other Global Cities

Embargoed until Tuesday, November 18

LONDON, Nov. 18 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- London and New York still rank among the world's most successful cities, but face increasing competition from other global cities, according to an analysis of 30 major global indices and other data prepared by the Urban Land Institute, a global research and education institute dedicated to responsible land use. The report, entitled "City Success: What do the global indices tell us?" was released today at ULI's London New York Dialogue Conference in London.

The conference examined the dominance of London and New York as global financial and cultural centers in the late 20th century, and explored how they are reacting to the worldwide economic crisis and how they must adjust to retain their top-ranking positions in the decades to come. Both cities face formidable challenges from global cities such as Tokyo, Hong Kong, Paris, Shanghai, Dubai and Mumbai, noted Richard Rosan, president, ULI Worldwide. "Cities of the 21st century are hubs of a new globalised society. They are physical nodes of the global economy, the environment, information systems, infrastructure and leisure and culture. As a result, the success of these cities is of vital importance not only to city residents, but to whole nations and the global society at large."

The global indices report, prepared by ULI Senior Fellow Greg Clark, reviews approximately 30 major indices that measure factors ranging from investment prospects to climate change mitigation to overall community livability. It includes a wide variety of indices, from the MasterCard "Worldwide Centres of Commerce Index" to the Emerging Trends in Real Estate(R) series published by ULI and PricewaterhouseCoopers to The Climate Group's "Low Carbon: Leader Cities" ranking. From those measurements, the report seeks to draw conclusions about city performance and success factors, and offer views about which cities succeed and why.

According to William Kistler, president of ULI Europe, the Middle East, India and Africa, the global indices report shows some common indicators of success. "Connectivity and space to grow, quality of life and place, skills of the labour force, innovation and creativity, entrepreneurship and transparency of the business environment are all key factors for world-class cities," Kistler said. "However, these might be considered as measures for short-term success. To achieve lasting success, other measures must be considered, such as openness to international populations, adaptability of the city's brand, the city's role in fostering international trade, power and influence of the language, investment in the city from all sources, and sustainability in terms of climate and environmental sensitivity."

Noted Clark: "The indices do show a remarkable degree of consensus, given they each used very different systems of measurements, but they reiterate the need for city leaders to use a range of indices, not just one or two. However, a simple aggregation should not be used as a ranking in itself, but rather as a method of promoting discussion of better means to measure comparative city performance."

The report shows that London and New York appear to succeed not just because they do well on well understood measures of productivity (such as skills and connectivity), but also because the English Language, Anglo American legal system and capital markets, their openness to International Populations, and their cultural endowments are substantial.

In addition, the report finds that major cities in emerging economies are improving rapidly on most measures, and London and New York will face competition from these cities (Hong Kong, Shanghai, Sao Paolo, Dubai for example) and also from other smaller cities that have strong niches and fewer problems to solve.

The report subdivides the indices into four key clusters that illustrate the core strengths and weaknesses of cities:

1. Global Economic Reach - London and New York are recognised as joint world leaders, followed by Paris, Tokyo and Chicago.

2. Quality of Life - Identifies Copenhagen as a world leader followed jointly by Vancouver, Vienna and Zurich.

3. Image and Attractiveness - Paris tops the rankings followed by London, with Sydney, Vancouver, Venice and Vienna in joint third place.

4. Investment and Fiscal - New York and Paris share first place followed by London.

In addition a fifth cluster focusing on Knowledge Base has been developed that generally measures research output from universities based in cities. However, this indices was not used to calculate the aggregated city positioning, because it does not offer a comprehensive index. In this cluster, Stanford topped the rankings followed jointly by San Jose, Boston and Harvard.

About the Urban Land Institute

The Urban Land Institute (www.uli.org) is a nonprofit education and research institute supported by its members. Its mission is to provide leadership in the responsible use of land and in creating and sustaining thriving communities worldwide. Established in 1936, the Institute has more than 40,000 members, including 2,400 in Europe, representing all aspects of the land use and development disciplines. The ULI Europe office was opened in 2004 in London and is committed to bringing timely and informative programmes to all segments of the property community in Europe.

SOURCE Urban Land Institute

International News / Press Release source: PR Newswire
Copyright PR Newswire. All Rights Reserved.

Foreign Affairs News / Press Releases

40 Million Quit Chinese Communist Party (CCP) To Help Disintegrate CCP and End All Persecutions
PR Newswire

Stop Chinese Communist Party (CCP)'s Tyranny: End CCP's Nine Year Persecution of Falun Gong
PR Newswire

Indian and Pakistani Publics Show Flexibility on Kashmir
PR Newswire

Five Asiatic Black Bears Return to the Wild
PR Newswire

Boycott Beijing Olympics, China Expert Says
PR Newswire

US National News / Press Releases

40 Million Quit Chinese Communist Party (CCP) To Help Disintegrate CCP and End All Persecutions
PR Newswire

Stop Chinese Communist Party (CCP)'s Tyranny: End CCP's Nine Year Persecution of Falun Gong
PR Newswire

Battelle to Consult With Japan CCS Company on Carbon Capture, Storage
PR Newswire

Indian and Pakistani Publics Show Flexibility on Kashmir
PR Newswire

Five Asiatic Black Bears Return to the Wild
PR Newswire