A steep rise in the cost of living has pushed Nairobi up the list of Africa’s most
expensive cities and diluted the quality of life for its residents, a newly
published report indicates.
The Kenyan capital is now ranked Africa’s second most expensive city after
Nigeria’s Lagos, putting to test its ability to attract foreign investment and
tourists.
This latest ranking is the opposite of last year’s edition when Nairobi was
listed as the second least expensive city in Africa after Egypt’s Cairo.
The new survey did not include Angola’s capital Luanda, which has consistently
ranked as the world’s most expensive city.
The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), the UK firm that conducted
the research, said the change in Nairobi’s ranking is linked to the steep rise
in the cost of six goods in a basket used to measure relative prices.
The survey found that the Kenyan capital is particularly expensive for the
middle and upper class residents who consume luxury goods and prefer private cars to public transport.
The high cost of living in the Kenyan capital is mainly driven by the prices of
consumer goods such as petrol, beers and wines. A litre of petrol costs an
average of $1.3 in Nairobi, up from $1.24 last year – nearly five times the
$0.35 price that consumers are charged in Cairo and Lagos’ $0.61.
Egypt and Nigeria offer heavy subsidies to consumers of petrol while Kenya did
away with all subsidies in the early 1990s.
The price differences are equally high in Nairobi’s wines market where a 750 ml
bottle costs an average of $12.23 compared to $10.09 in January last year.
A similar quantity of wine costs an average of $7.81 in Johannesburg, Lagos
($11.48), Cairo ($7.06) and Pretoria ($8.21).
Nairobi’s consumers are however bearing a lighter burden in the foods compared
to other African cities. EIU found that a kilogramme of bread costs $1.4 or
nearly half the $2.47 price in Lagos.
EIU says highly priced consumer goods have eroded the quality of life for
millions of Nairobi residents than the previous year when the city ranked 174
in the quality of living index prepared by Mercer – an international human resource
consultancy.
EIU has placed Nairobi in the 177th position in the quality of living index.
Austrian capital Vienna is the city with the highest quality of living,
followed by Zurich, Auckland, Munich, and Vancouver, according to the EIU
index.
This year’s index shows that residents of Nairobi are enjoying a lower quality
of living than those who live in the Ugandan capital Kampala which is ranked
162.
The Kenyan capital is, however, ahead of Tanzania’s Dar es Salaam (187),
Nigeria’s Abuja (205) and bottom ranked Baghdad (221).
The quality of living index is linked to a number of factors including the cost
of transport, housing, electricity, cost and quality of water, political
stability and security.
Analysts said Nairobi’s latest standing in the two surveys could reduce
attractiveness to foreign investors, particularly because they must bear the
burden of higher compensation for expatriate staff posted to Kenya to cover the
increased costs.
“To appropriately compensate the expatriates, multinationals must include
adequate hardship allowances in the compensation packages,” said Slagin
Parakatil, a senior researcher at Mercer.
An increase in the cost of compensation for expatriates –usually senior
executives and technical staff — ultimately raises the cost of doing business
for the companies making the difference among cities.
Some analysts however maintained that the rankings are unlikely to make a big
impact on Nairobi’s attractiveness to investors seeking a piece of Kenya’s and East Africa’s consumer markets.
“Kenya is an important market for any investor who is seeking growth in
Africa’s frontier markets,” said Sammy Onyango, the chief executive of Deloitte
East Africa.
He said a lot more factors remain in favour of Kenya including its relatively
bigger economy, a highly-skilled labour force as well as its status as a
regional transport and communication hub.
The Kenyan capital has in the past three years attracted a number of global
corporations that have established regional manufacturing and distribution
networks in the city. The list includes US conglomerate General Electric,
beverage firm PepsiCo, vehicle manufacturer Beiqi Foton, and technology firm
IBM.
Kenya is betting on the recently launched $10 billion (Sh870 billion) Konza
technopolis to attract more investments in real estate and ICT sectors.
Multinationals and diplomatic missions have regularly used the cost of living
and quality of life rankings to set hardship allowances and remuneration
packages of staff sent to work in a country with lower quality of living
compared to their home-country.
Expatriates are also paid a premium on their salaries to compensate for the
inconvenience of being uprooted from home and relocated to a foreign country.
Transnational companies also rely on the cost of living surveys to determine
allowances paid to staff on short business trips.
Nairobi’s latest ranking as a more expensive and less desirable metropolis is
expected to further lift the compensation of expatriates whose salaries
were hugely inflated in late 2011 as the Shilling weakened against major world
currencies.
Globally, the EIU has ranked Japan’s Tokyo and Osaka as the world’s most
expensive cities while India’s Mumbai and Pakistan’s Karachi are the least
expensive cities to live in. 
Last year’s Mercer survey found that Nairobi remains ahead of many African
capitals in terms of infrastructure development – a factor that may help offset
the city’s high cost of living.
Nairobi is ranked at 173 in terms of infrastructure development out of the
total 221 cities ranked. Dar es Salaam finished in the 188th position, Kampala
(195), Lagos (214), and Abuja (215).
Analysts see this as a major score for the Kenyan capital that particularly
determines a city’s attractiveness to expatriates. “Infrastructure has a
significant effect on the quality of living that expatriates experience,” Mr
Parakatil said.
“A city’s infrastructure can generate severe hardship when it is deficient,” he
said. The infrastructure rankings are based on electricity supply, water
availability, telephone and mail services, public transportation, traffic
congestion and the range of international flights from local airports Nairobi’s high infrastructure
standing has recently benefitted from completion of major projects such as the
Thika superhighway and expansion of its airport.
Kenya plans to invest billions of shillings in new infrastructure for Nairobi
that should further lift city’s investment credentials. The list includes new
highways, a new airport terminal to more than triple its capacity to 9.3
million passengers by 2015.
Mercer names Singapore as having the best infrastructure globally, with its
port handling a fifth of the world’s shipping containers. It is followed by Frankfurt, Munich, Copenhagen,
and Düsseldorf. - Business
Daily Africa
 
 
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