Jun 09 (Japan Times) - The pandemic has shaken up the rankings of the world’s most livable cities, a study released Wednesday showed, with Osaka and Tokyo ranking in the top five and metropolises in Australia and New Zealand also leaping ahead of those in Europe.
Auckland tops The Economist’s annual survey of the world’s most livable cities in 2021, followed by Osaka. Adelaide, in Australia, finished third while Tokyo and Wellington finished in a tie at No. 4. All cities fared relatively well during the COVID-19 pandemic compared to metropolises in Europe and North America.
Osaka and Tokyo earned high marks for stability and health care, while Osaka nudged ahead of its national rival with a slightly higher score for infrastructure. Both scored lower than Auckland when it came to education, as well as culture and environment.
“Auckland rose to the top of the ranking owing to its successful approach in containing the COVID-19 pandemic, which allowed its society to remain open and the city to score strongly,” the Economist Intelligence Unit said.
In contrast, “European cities fared particularly poorly in this year’s edition.”
“Vienna, previously the world’s most liveable city between 2018-20, fell to 12th. Eight of the top ten biggest falls in the rankings are European cities,” according to the study.