These are Asia’s least liveable cities
Two populous hubs in the Indian subcontinent represent the region’s worst in annual EIU ranking
Cities in Bangladesh and Pakistan are the least liveable in Asia, according to the newest annual Global Liveability Index by The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU).
With a rating of just 39.2, Dhaka sits just two spots below war-torn Damascus as the world’s least liveable urban centre. The Bangladeshi capital, home to 18.2 million people in its metropolitan area, ranks 138th on the 140-city index.
Ranking fifth-least liveable on earth is Karachi, assigned a score of 40.9. Like Damascus, and along with Nigeria’s Lagos, Karachi scored 20 in the metric of stability—the lowest among the bottom 10 cities in the ranking.
Karachi has around 15 million inhabitants.
More: Cambodia’s farewell to Everything But Arms
Dhaka fared a little better in the stability metric with a score of 55. However, the densely populated city scored just 26.8 in the infrastructure metric: the lowest among the 10 least liveable cities.
The Bangladeshi city also left a lot to be desired in the culture and environment metric. “A slew of cities in emerging markets that are among the most exposed to the effects of climate change have seen their scores downgraded. These include New Delhi in India, which suffers from appalling air quality, Cairo in Egypt (where air quality is also a major issue) and Dhaka in Bangladesh,” EIU researchers noted.
Cities on the EIU ranking are judged according to the categories of stability, infrastructure, culture and environment, healthcare, and education.
Tripoli, Port Moresby, Harare, Douala, Algiers and Caracas round out the 10 least liveable cities. On the other end of the ranking, Vienna took the top spot for the second consecutive year, with Osaka ranking most liveable in Asia.
Recommended
Dewan Architects’ Mohammed Adib leads with human-centred design and technological innovation in the Middle East and beyond
Mohammed Adib channels his childhood curiosity and dislike for design uniformity into his work at Dewan Architects + Engineers
UAE real estate shifts focus to sustainability and quality, revitalising iconic projects
The UAE has risen from its challenges to emerge as a more sustainable, quality-focused destination
Exploring A Life By Design’s maximalist approach to interior design
Andrea Savage is embracing the maximalist trend with bold and vibrant interior designs
Jakarta’s emerging innovation hub integrates tech and healthcare sectors
The Digital Hub in BSD City is being positioned as Indonesia’s counterpart to Silicon Valley