Delhi, Mumbai among Least Expensive Cities in the World


Delhi and Mumbai are one of the least expensive cities in the world suggests the latest World Cost of Living 2012 Survey. It was noted that Arab city Muscat in Oman led the list of the least expensive cities also including Dhaka, Katmandu and Karachi.

The Economist Intelligence Unit survey is conducted twice annually and compares more than 400 prices across 160 products and services and it includes food, drink, clothing, household supplies and personal care items, home rents, transport, utility bills, private schools, domestic help and recreational costs. The survey compared living costs in 130 cities and crowned Zurich as the world’s most expensive city for the first time in more than 20 years.  It is also noted that Western Europe still accounts for 24 of the most expensive cities in the top 50, with 14 hailing from Asia.

It was noted that although Asian hubs are making their presence felt at the top of the cost of living stakes, another kind is also making its presence felt at the bottom. Three of the four cheapest locations hail from the Indian subcontinent, stressing why India has been such a target of labor outsourcing, relocation and FDI over the last decade. There seems to be more structural basis, with cheap labor and land costs making India and Pakistan very attractive to those bargain hungry visitors or investors willing to be daring some of the security risks that accompany such low prices, especially in Pakistan.

The ten most expensive cities were Zurich at position one, followed by Tokyo. Geneva and Osaka Kobe followed next. Oslo and Paris ranked fifth and sixth respectively. Sydney and Melbourne were on the seventh and eighth position respectively while Singapore was on the ninth. Frankfort took the tenth position.

The survey recorded that an index swing of 34 percentage points pushed the Swiss city up 4 places compared to last year to overtake Tokyo which remains in second place. Geneva, the other Swiss city surveyed with a 30 percentage point rise in the cost of living to move up six places into joint third alongside Osaka. Japan and Switzerland both have seen strong currency movements over the last few years which have made them relatively more expensive. Especially Switzerland in the last year has seen this change where investors looking for a haven currency outside the stressed Eurozone have invested heavily in the Swiss Franc, prompting an unprecedented move by the Swiss government to peg the Swiss Franc to the Euro to keep the currency competitive.

The ten least expensive cities consisted of Muscat, Dhaka, Algiers, Kathmandu, Panama City, Jeddah, New Delhi, Tehran, Mumbai and Karachi. 

The content in the survey reports is derived from the extensive economic, financial, political and business risk analysis of over 203 countries worldwide. The cost of petrol prices in New Delhi is noted to have more than doubled in the past decade in U.S. dollar terms, while rice prices have increased almost threefold and a marginal increase is seen in the cost of a loaf of bread.

It was also recorded that the cheapest cities in the ranking are dominated by Asian and Middle Eastern cities. The latter owes, in part, to the use of price controls and the pegging of currencies to the U.S. dollar.

In India the GDP spilt in agriculture is noted to be 3.5 percent in 2012 and is expected to decrease to 3.0 percent in 2013. In the industry sector a percentage change of 4 percent is noted in 2012 and is expected to be 8 percent in 2013. In the service sector 8.8 percent in 2012 is noted and is expected to increase to 9.2 in 2013.

Rupee: Most Undervalued Among all Currencies


The Economist’s latest Big Mac Index has come up with a survey and declared Indian rupee to be the most undervalued currency. Currently rupee trades at around 61 percent below its actual price against dollar. 8 out of 10 Asian currencies are undervalued. The currency rating was done by analyzing how a particular good will carry different values in different countries. McDonald’s popular burger was t he chosen one to evaluate the costs of the same burger in different countries. Through this the effective purchasing power of different currencies is measured.

Rupee: Most Undervalued Currency Among all Currencies

Swiss Franc and the Norwegian Krone which had a currency index more than 60 percent were the two countries which were overvalued compared to the U.S. dollar. Further down were Sweden Brazil with over 40 and 30 percent overvaluation.

Indian Rupee has been hitting the ground for the last two years. Ukraine, Hong Kong and Malaysia are close at over 40 percent undervaluation. China’s Yuan is the fifth most undervalued currency with over 40 percent overvalued with regard to U.S. dollar.

The last six months have witnessed 17 percent value depreciation of the rupee, which makes it more undervalued than Chinese Yuan, which is estimated to be standing at 41 percent. China has been under continuous pressure from U.S. to appreciate its currency and shift to a market-based exchange rate mechanism.

Big Mac has come up with a comparison between the prices of burger in the U.S., where it’s currently sold for $4.20. But in India the Maharaja Mac is priced at 84. The exchange rate of 51.90 to a dollar costs a burger in India for $1.62. The purchasing power parity (PPP) comes out at 20 when we divide the local price i.e. 84 by the U.S. price, i.e. $4.20. The currency is overvalued or undervalued can easily be calculated through the difference between PPP and the exchange rate. Previously when Big Mac Index came up with this statistics, the Indian rupee was trading at around 44.40 percent to a dollar, and was undervalued by 53 percent.

However, cheap burgers cannot be the deciding factor to know if a currency is overvalued or undervalued. There are different factors which states why a currency is overvalued or undervalued such as government policies hinder normal equilibration of exchange rates. Also the labor costs come into picture which plays a vital role in different countries.

Ajit Ranade, Chief Economist at Aditya Birla Group tweeted, “Reversal inevitable.” D K Joshi, Chief Economist at rating agency CRISIL added, “It is a proxy indicator and it does not signify much. But given our growth potential, capital inflows are expected to increase and there will be an appreciation bias.” An appreciation is on bet by most of the foreign exchange dealers, but the situation in Europe is under a close watch. The slower growth rate and perception of policy paralysis has shied off many foreign investors from Indian stock market, FIIs has withdrawn around 3,800 crore from the share market.