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Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Weak Dollar impacting cost of living around the world

The Indian rupee on Wednesday hit a seven-week high of 42.30 per dollar in the morning trade as the political uncertainty ended after the UPA government on Tuesday won the trust vote.

At the Interbank Foreign Exchange (Forex) market, the local currency resumed stronger at 42.49/51 a dollar against its previous close of 42.73/74 a dollar and later soared to 42.30/31 a dollar in late morning deals.
With the US Dollar continuing it's multi-year slide, the cost of living is going up around the world. Particularly in India and China, as both the Rupee and Yuan continue to gain value vs. the US Dollar.
The rupee touched the intra-day high of June 2 within minutes of resumption of trading on exporters dollar sales and expectations of increased capital inflows into equity markets following emergence of political stability.

Forex dealers said exporters resorted to dollar selling on fears that the Indian unit will strengthen further as the government will be able to push forward economic reforms in the absence of the Left parties.

They said strong equity markets and easing global oil prices also aided the rupee sentiment.

Indian benchmark Sensex was up 653 points at 1000 hours while Asian indices were trading higher by 1.25 per cent to 3.6 per cent in early trade.
Rupee / US Dollar / Forex Currency News, Gold prices India, and The Sensex index on the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE). Euro / Rupee and Yen / Rupee. Silver Quotes

Mercer's latest survey shows a weakening US dollar is causing significant changes in rankings of cities in terms of cost of living for expats, with Moscow becoming the most expensive city while Asuncin in Paraguay the least.

Hong Kong has ranked the sixth, Beijing 20th and Shanghai 24th. Shenzhen ranked 61st while Guangzhou ranked 70th on the list.

According to the survey, Asian and European cities dominate the top 10. Tokyo climbed two spots to rank as the most expensive city in Asia while London dropped a notch to rank third. Oslo climbed six places to the fourth place, followed by Seoul as the fifth most expensive city.

Mercer's survey covers 143 cities across six continents and measures the comparative cost of over 200 items in each location, including housing, transport, food, clothing, household goods and entertainment. It is the world's most comprehensive cost of living survey and is used to help multinational companies and governments determine cost of living allowances for their expatriate employees.

Mercer is a leading global provider of consulting, outsourcing and investment services.

Yvonne Traber, the principal research manager at Mercer, said: "Our research confirms the global trend in price increases for certain food items and petrol, though the rise is not consistent in all locations. This is partly balanced by decreasing prices for certain commodities such as electronic and electrical goods. We attribute this to cheaper imports from developing countries, especially China, and to advances in technology."

Although the five top-ranking cities in Asia remain relatively unchanged in the ranking, there have been significant changes further down the list. In India, Mumbai has moved up four places to reach 48, while New Delhi has gone up 13 places to 55 because of a stronger rupee against the US dollar. But In China, Shenzhen dropped 8 places from last year's 53 and Guangzhou moved to 70th from last year's 68.

Neo Siew Khim, Mercer's Asia-Pacific head of information product solutions, said: "The increase in cost of living rankings for cities in countries such as Singapore, India and the Philippines can be attributed to the strong economic growth coupled with consumer demand (as in India), and the increasing attractiveness of the Philippines as an alternative investment location to China and India."

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