The least expensive city to live within East Africa is Uganda’s capital Kampala, while Kenya’s Nairobi, is the most expensive.
Rwanda’s capital Kigali is the second least-expensive followed by Tanzania’s commercial hub Dar es Salaam, according to the Mercer 2020 Cost of Living Survey.
Out of 40 countries sampled in Africa, Kampala ranked 30th, Kigali 29th Dar es Salaam 26th and Nairobi 16th in terms of cost of living.
The annual Mercer survey ranks cities’ cost of living based on the prices of goods and services such as food, clothing and rent. It is mainly used by multinational organisations to set remuneration packages for their foreign-based employees.
“The Covid-19 pandemic reminds us that sending and keeping employees on international assignments is a huge responsibility and a difficult task to manage,” said Ilya Bonic, career president and head of Mercer Strategy.
According to Mercer’s 26th annual Cost of Living Survey, Victoria in the Seychelles is the most expensive city to live in Africa, followed by N’Djamena in Chad, Lagos in Nigeria, Kinshasa in Democratic Republic of Congo and Libreville in Gabon.
Tunis in Tunisia is the least expensive city to live in on the continent followed by Windhoek in Namibia, Banjul in Gambia, Lusaka in Zambia and Gaborone in Botswana.
The survey found that specific factors such as currency fluctuations, cost inflation for goods and services, and instability of accommodation prices are essential to determining the cost of expatriate packages for employees on international assignments.
Hong Kong tops the list of most expensive cities for expatriates, followed by Ashgabat in Turkmenistan in second position. Tokyo in Japan and Zurich in Switzerland remain in third and fourth positions respectively, whereas Singapore city in Singapore is fifth, down two places from last year. New York City ranked sixth from ninth place.
Other cities appearing in the top 10 of Mercer’s costliest cities for expatriates are Shanghai in China, Bern in Switzerland, Geneva in Switzerland and Beijing in China.
The world’s least expensive cities for expatriates, according to Mercer’s survey, are Tunis in Tunisia, followed by Windhoek in Namibia, Tashkent in Uzbekistan and Bishkek in Kyrgyzstan.
Mercer’s data was collected in March this year, with price variances in many locations not being significant due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
“Organisations should prepare for the redeployment of their mobile workforces, leading with empathy and understanding that not all expatriates will be ready or willing to go abroad.”
According to the global online database Numbeo, the cost of living index in Kampala is 19.63 per cent lower than in Nairobi, with house rent on average being 18 per cent lower than in Nairobi.
Numbeo estimates the monthly costs for a four-person family in Kampala at $1,739 without rent, while that for a single person is estimated at $490 without rent.
The cost of living index excluding rent in Kampala is estimated at 32.06 per cent, with local purchasing power index at 15.38 per cent, while in Kigali these figures are estimated at 35.29 per cent and 21.12 per cent respectively.
According to the database the cost of living index in Dar es Salaam, excluding rent, stands at around 37.13 per cent with local purchasing power index at 18.23 per cent.
Nairobi is the most expensive city with the cost of living index excluding rent estimated at 39.89 per cent, with local purchasing power index at 26.5 per cent.
The general level of prices for goods and services last month increased by 5.47 per cent and 3.2 per cent in Kenya and Tanzania respectively.
In Uganda and Rwanda, the overall month-on-month inflation stood at 2.8 per cent and 5.7 per cent, respectively.
Source: The EastAfrican