Showing posts with label world. Show all posts
Showing posts with label world. Show all posts

Thursday, 23 August 2012

The world's 15 richest Muslim countries


Qatar
GDP (PPP) per capita: $ 88,919 (2011)
Kuwait
GDP (PPP) per capita: $54,654 (2011)
Brunei
GDP (PPP) per capita: $50,506 (2010)
United Arab Emirates
GDP (PPP) per capita: $48,222 (2011)
Oman
GDP (PPP) per capita: $28,880 (2011)
Saudi Arabia
GDP (PPP) per capita: $24,434 (2011)


Bahrain
GDP (PPP) per capita: $23, 690 (2011)
Turkey
GDP (PPP) per capita: $16,885 (2011)
Libya
GDP (PPP) per capita: $16,855 (2009)
(Note: The figures are before the popular uprising in the country)
Malaysia
GDP (PPP) per capita: $15,589 (2011)
Lebanon
GDP (PPP) per capita:$14,709 (2011)
Kazakhstan
GDP (PPP) per capita:$13,189 (2011)
Iran
GDP (PPP) per capita: $11,479 (2009)
Azerbaijan
GDP (PPP) per capita: $10,136 (2011)
Tunisia
GDP (PPP) per capita: $9,415 (2011)
Note: The list is based on gross domestic product at purchasing power parity per capita, the value of all final goods and services produced within a country in a given year divided by the average (or mid-year) population for the same year. Data refer mostly to the year 2011. World Development Indicators database, World Bank.













Friday, 6 July 2012

Top 25 business cities in the world


The top 25 startup ecosystems in the world
The Startup Genome, a research firm which collects data on what makes start-ups successful has recently released a list of the Top 25 startup ecosystems in the world. Bangalore, at number nine is in the top 10, and Mumbai at number 20 is the other city, that carries the flag for India in the elite list.


1. Silicon Valley, U.S.










2. New York City, U.S.












3. London, U.K.









4. Toronto, Canada










5. Telaviv, Israel










6. Los Angeles, U.S.










7. Singapore









8. Sao Paulo, Brazil.










9. Bangalore, Mumbai











10. Moscow, Russia















11. Paris, France










12. Santiago, Chile









13. Seattle, U.S.











14. Madrid, Spain










15. Chicago, U.S.










16. Vancouver, Canada











17. Berlin, Germany










18. Boston, U.S.











19. Austin, U.S.










20. Mumbai, India












21. Sydney, Australia









22. Melbourne, Australia










23. Warsaw, Poland










24. Washington, U.S.










25. Montreal, Canada

Monday, 5 March 2012

World's 10 cheapest cities to live in


Asian and Middle Eastern cities dominate the lower-end rankings in latest Worldwide Cost of Living Survey conducted by the prestigious Economic Intelligence Unit (EIU)

10..Oman’s capital Muscat is the world's tenth cheapest city to live in, according to the latest Worldwide Cost of Living Survey (WCOL) conducted by the prestigious Economic Intelligence Unit. The survey allows for city to city comparisons, but for the purpose of this report all cities are compared to a base city of New York, which has an index set at 100.
With a score of 63 on the index, Muscat ranks at No.10.


09..With a score of 61 on the index, Bangladesh’s capital Dhaka ranks at No.9. The bi-annual (twice yearly) survey compares more than 400 individual prices across 160 products and services. They include food, drink, clothing, household supplies and personal care items, home rents, transport, utility bills, private schools, domestic help and recreational costs.




Algiers (in Algeria) ranks at No.8 on the list, with an index score of 59. The cheapest cities in the ranking are dominated by Asian and Middle Eastern cities. The latter of these is due, in part, to the use of price controls and the pegging of currencies to the US dollar.





At No.7 is Kathmandu, with a score of 58.












Panama City is tied with Kathmandu with a score of 58 on the index.











The Red Sea port city of Jeddah (Saudi Arabia) is the fifth cheapest city in the world to live in. It has a score of 57, as compared to the base city of New York, which has an index set at 100.








Three of the four cheapest locations hail from the Indian subcontinent, highlighting why India has been such a target of labour outsourcing, relocation and FDI over the last decade. New Delhi is the fourth cheapest city in the world, with 56 points on the index.





Tehran (Iran) is ranked at No.3, with 54 points.













Here’s one result that could raise a few eyebrows and generate some heated comments (you can post your opinions below). India’s financial capital Mumbai is rated the world’s second cheapest city in the EIU study. It has a score of 52 on the index.
Not surprisingly, Mumbai also saw the highest drop in office rental prices.





Cheap labour and land costs making India and Pakistan incredibly attractive to those bargain hungry visitors or investors willing to brave some of the security risks that accompany such low prices, especially in Pakistan.
Karachi is the cheapest city to live in the world based on EIU’s parameters. It has a score of 46, as compared to the base city of New York, which has an index set at 100.
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