Economic and commercial environment
Johannesburg, Cape Town and Durban were ranked equally in fifth
position on this measurement, which computes the time and costs
involved in building a standard warehouse, registering a property, and
exporting and importing cargo. Corruption and foreign bond ratings are
included in this dimension. The three top cities were Santiago, Kuala
Lumpur and Budapest.
Economic growth and development
This measurement was made on the basis of a number of factors: GDP
growth; GDP per capita; exchange rate volatility; inflation rate; FDI
inward; direct investment abroad; exports of goods and services; total
trade of goods and services; urban population growth rate; and
city/metropolis population as a percentage of total population. Five
Chinese cities took the top five positions. South African cities scored
badly on this measure, with Johannesburg coming in at 59th, Cape Town
at 62nd and Durban at 64th.
Business environment
This dimension was judged the most significant by the research panel,
with Cape Town, Durban and Johannesburg being placed together in the
first position. The criteria here were shareholder protection laws and
corporate tax burdens.
Financial services environment
There are six indicators on this measurement: total value of equities
trading; total value of bond trading; total number of derivative
contracts; total number of commodities contracts; financial services
network; and measurements of banking services and currency exchange
regulations. Johannesburg, which reported the highest total
bond-trading value, was placed third in this category, behind Mumbai
and Shanghai. Cape Town was listed 39th, and Durban 50th.
Commercial connectivity
This dimension measures the connectivity of a city to other world and
regional commercial centres by air, airline passenger volumes, the
presence of foreign consulates/embassies and international hotels and
convention facilities, and international trade. Johannesburg was placed
18th, Cape Town was 48th, and Durban 59th. Top of the list was
Shanghai, Bangkok and Beijing.
Education and IT connectivity
Chinese cities scored high on this measurement, with Johannesburg
slipping to 56th position, with Cape Town sitting at 51st and Durban at
55th. This dimension measures the intensity of education activities, as
well as national levels of internet and telecommunications
connectivity. Cities lower on the scale were affected by a lack of
medical schools, low number of internet users, and low numbers of
broadband subscribers.
Quality of urban life
The criteria of measurement on this dimension were the limitations on
personal freedom/media and censorship; medical and health
considerations; public services and transport; recreation and culture;
in addition to climate, mortality, and the presence of world heritage
sites. Latin American and eastern European cities were the top
performers here. South African cities were hampered by the infant
mortality rate and life expectancy at birth indicators, with Cape Town
coming in at 10th position, Durban at 12th, and Johannesburg at 15th.
The three cities did "extremely well" on media freedom, medical and
health conditions, recreation and culture, and climate indicators.
Risk and security
Personal freedom and "personal physical city" were the criteria by
which this dimension was measured. Budapest and Warsaw were the top two
performers, with Cape Town falling into 5th position, Durban at 6th and
Johannesburg at 11th position. While the South African cities scored
highly on the democracy index, travel warnings and record of natural
disasters indicators, they didn’t score well on crime and law
enforcement indicators.
Emerging market influence
With the International Monetary Fund expecting global economic growth to be primarily driven by emerging economies at an unprecedented rate of 12 to 1 compared to rich-world economies, MasterCard says that emerging markets are becoming increasingly important investment and business centres.
This is clear when one sees that China has 15 cities on the index, followed by India (with eight), Brazil (with five) and Russia (with four) – with the leading city in each country being Shanghai, Mumbai, Sao Paulo and Moscow respectively.
The Hungarian capital Budapest ranks third on the index, helped by its quick embrace of the free market system following the collapse of the Soviet Union and its influence in the region.
A former world capital, Budapest was among the first Eastern European cities to trade with the West following the Cold War, and is benefitting from its first mover initiatives, MasterCard says.
"As the current financial environment shows, globalisation is a part of today's economic reality - capital, talent, technology and even intellectual property now move seamlessly across borders and nations," said MasterCard Worldwide Centres of Commerce programme director Michael Goldberg.
"Emerging market cities will play an increasingly role in global commerce and may provide unique market opportunities for businesses in the face of changing economic times."
Source: SouthAfrica.infoThe all-in-one official guide
and web portal to South Africa.




