Baku among world`s most livable cities
Residents of Melbourne enjoy another year in the world’s most livable city, according to the 2015 Global Livability Ranking the Economist Intelligence Unit.
The ranking, which considers 30 factors related to things like safety, healthcare, educational resources, infrastructure and environment in 140 cities, shows that since 2010 average livability across the world has fallen by 1%, led by a 2.2% fall in the score for stability and safety. Ongoing conflicts in Syria, Ukraine and Libya have been compounded by terrorist shootings in France and Tunisia as well as civil unrest in America. In Athens, austerity rather than unrest has weighed on the provision of public services, while Kiev saw the sharpest fall over the last 12 months and is now among the ten least livable cities ranked.
The most livable places, notes the EIU, tend to be “mid-sized cities in wealthier countries with a relatively low population density”, which explains the low ranking of near-mega-cities like London and New York and goes some way to explaining Melbourne’s continued place in the sun.
Baku has taken the 103rd place in the ranking.
Experts gave 65 points to Baku for stability, 66.7% for healthcare, 60.9 for environment, 75 for education and 50 for infrastructure. In general, Baku`s livability was estimated at 62.3 points.