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The Malaysian cities of
Kuala Lumpur and Georgetown are among the top 10 locations in Asia where
Europeans prefer to work and live in, according to a latest
international location ratings survey.
Kuala Lumpur was ranked ninth and Georgetown 10th, after Singapore,
Kobe, Yokohama, Hong Kong, Tokyo, Macau, Seoul and Taipei, said ECA
International, an agency that develops and provides solutions for the
management and assignment of employees around the world, in its annual
Location Ratings Survey.
The survey rates living standards in more than 400 locations globally,
according to categories including climate, air quality, health services,
housing and utilities, isolation, social network and leisure facilities,
infrastructure, personal safety and political tensions.
Its overall ratings normally would be used by international human
resources departments to establish allowances which compensate
expatriate staff for the difficulties of adapting to living in their
assignment location.
Both Kuala Lumpur and Georgetown were also ranked ninth in Asia for
Asians to live in, the survey said, adding that in the world's rankings,
they took 61st and 64th spots, respectively.
In that same global category, Singapore took first placing, followed by
Kobe (3), Yokohama (4), Tokyo (6), Hong Kong (11), Taipei (56), Macau
(56) and Bangkok (63).
The survey also said Baghdad remained the least favourable location to
live in, followed by Kabul, Karachi and Port-au-Prince.
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