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SWISS

Swiss cities remain costly for expats: report

Zurich, Geneva, Basel and Bern remain the most expensive cities in Europe apart from Oslo and another Norwegian city, according to the latest global ranking from consulting firm ECA International.

Swiss cities remain costly for expats: report
Zurich by night: Europe's most expensive city outside Norway (Photo:Tmesis)

Switzerland’s biggest cities are still more affordable than Norway’s capital and Stavanger, but otherwise are more costly places to live in than elsewhere in Europe, the consultant said in its annual report released this week.

However, the Swiss cities, which have recently seen prices drop on the strength of a strong franc, have been overtaken by ones in Japan, Venezuela and Angola as places where the cost of basic goods is the highest, ECA said.

Geneva, which last year was ranked third on the list, has fallen to tenth, while Zurich has dropped to ninth from fifth a year ago.

Bern’s ranking fell to 11th compared to seventh, while Basel is rated 12th, down from ninth.

Tokyo remains the world’s most expensive city, followed by Nagoya, also in Japan, and Oslo.

The ranking is base on surveys taken in May and September for ECA, a company that provides information for international companies to help them manage and assign employees around the world.

The surveys compare the costs of a basket of day-to-day goods and services.

Japanese cities occupied four of the top six spots in the ranking, while Luanda in Angola (fourth, up from 11th) and Caracas, Venezuela (seventh, up from 13th) jumped into the top 10 for the 2012 list.

Overall, variations in economic growth and changes in currency values led to dramatic changes in ECA’s list of expensive cities.

The company said cost of living plummeted in some parts of Europe — Madrid, for example, fell 44 places to 105th on the list.

The costs in Swiss cities were less affected than those in elsewhere in Europe  that “fell in the global ranking as the euro and other European currencies weakened against the US dollar,” ECA said.

Also “prices increased at a slower rate in Europe on average than other regions over the year.”
 
Meanwhile, costs rose in Chinese cities across the board, while Hong Kong overtook Manhattan on the list in a dramatic move from 32nd, up from 58th a year earlier.

The basket of goods and services compared includes food, drink, tobacco, miscellaneous goods and services, as well as general items such as electrical goods, motoring and meals out.

The surveys do not include accommodation costs, utility charges, car purchases and school fees because these are “usually compensated for separately in expatriate packages”, ECA said.  

Living costs for expats “are affected by inflation, availability of goods and exchange rates,” the company’s report said,  “all of which can have a significant impact on . . . remuneration packages”.

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ENERGY

EXPLAINED: How high will heating bills be this winter in Germany?

The cost of energy is expected to rise again this coming winter, even though the government's price cap is supposed to be in effect until April 2024. Here's what households can expect.

EXPLAINED: How high will heating bills be this winter in Germany?

The onset of winter will raise concerns for many in Germany about the cost of heating their homes, with memories of last year’s rocketing prices and concerns over domestic gas supply resurfacing. 

But, compared to last year, the energy prices have now largely stabilised, though they are still higher than in 2021.

The stabilisation in prices is partly thanks to the government’s energy price cap which came into force earlier this year to cushion the blow of soaring energy prices by capping electricity costs at 40 cents per kilowatt-hour and natural gas at 12 cents.

READ ALSO: Germany looks to extend energy price cap until April 2024

The federal government plans to maintain this cap until the end of April, though this could be extended even longer, if necessary. 

How high are heating costs expected to go this year?

For the current year, experts from co2online expect somewhat lower heating costs than last year.

Heating with gas, for example, is expected to be 11 percent cheaper in 2023 than in 2022, costing €1,310 per year for a flat of 70 square metres. 

The cost of heating with wood pellets will drop by 17 percent to €870 per year, and heating with heating oil will cost 19 percent less and amount to €1,130.

According to co2online, the costs for heating with a heat pump will drop the most – by 20 percent to €1,1105. The reason for this, according to co2online, is a wider range of heat pump electricity tariffs.

Tax hikes in January

Starting January next year, the government will raise the value-added tax on natural gas from seven to nineteen percent.

Alongside this, the CO2 price, applicable when refuelling and heating, will also increase.

According to energy expert Thomas Engelke from the Federal Consumer Association, these increases will mean that a small single-family household with three or four people that heats with gas would then pay about €240 more per year for gas.

“That’s a lot”, he said. 

Another additional cost factor to consider is that network operators also want to raise prices. However, the federal government plans to allocate €5.5 billion to cushion this increase for consumers as much as possible, so how such cost increases will ultimately affect consumers is currently hard to estimate.

READ ALSO: Why people in Germany are being advised to switch energy suppliers

Overall, it can be said that, from January, consumers will have to brace themselves for higher energy costs, even though massive increases are currently not expected.

Consumer advocate Engelke advised customers to closely examine where potential savings could be made this upcoming winter: “Those who are now signing a new gas or electricity contract should inform themselves and possibly switch. Currently, you can save a few hundred euros. It’s worth it. On the other hand, you should also try to save as much energy as possible this winter.”

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