Vancouver is the most appropriate cities that is easy to live in
A
study published in the magazine "The Economist" that Vancouver is the most cities that is easy to live in, while Harare the most difficult to live in.
The study ranked 140 cities and according to five criteria: Stability, Health Conditions, Culture, The Environment, Education and
Infrastructure. Six of the first ten cities are in Canada and Australia.
The study authors said that the magazine business, "the cities that recorded the worst performance and reach the bottom of the ranking in Africa and Asia, where stability and infrastructure are inadequate and pose significant challenges".
Vancouver recorded 98 points out of 100, refers to "the task of infrastructure in Canada, while in Harare, the latter ranked by 37.5% due to "a worsening of the crisis in Zimbabwe.
Vienna occupied the second place in return for Melbourne and Perth, Toronto, Calgary, Helsinki and Geneva. Zurich and Sydney occupied in the ninth position equally.
Within the European cities like Stockholm, where pleasant to live and Hamburg is ranked fourth in the session, Paris was ranked seventh session, the Frankfurt ranked ninth session, Copenhagen, "21", Berlin "22".
On the other hand, recorded the worst result in Athens, the European continent with 81.2 point "63", Washington occupied in the thirty-fifth, and Los Angeles was ranked forty-eighth session, while London came in ranked first session return for Rome, "52", Moscow "69"The Beijing "76", Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paulo and Johannesburg," 92", Bangkok, "100".
Only the bottom of the ranking for the Asian and African cities: Manila, "108 points", New Delhi and Cairo, "114 points", Bombay "120 points", Nairobi "122 points" and Lusaka, "126 points".
The cities that were the result of less than fifty points from the eighth and twenty-percent occupied Phnom Penh and Tehran, ranked "129 points", Karachi, ranked "135 points" and Lagos, ranked "136 points". While Algiers and Dhaka escaped from the last occupied, where Harare came in last occupied.