A presentation held by ms Margareta Irenaus, Pwc, at the seminar "Are attractive cities also sustainable?" at Global Utmaning on the 15th of October 2012.
London offers a favorable business environment and is a top location for businesses in Europe. It has a stable tax regime with low corporate tax rates and has attracted more European headquarters than any other European city in recent years. London provides access to a large talent pool, major transport links globally, and a diverse economy that is projected to continue growing rapidly. The document promotes London as one of the best locations in Europe for businesses and investment due to these competitive advantages.
The document discusses various topics related to financial technology (FinTech) and regulation. It provides an overview of FinTech developments like peer-to-peer lending, crowdfunding, blockchain/bitcoin, and mobile payments. It also examines objectives-based and principles-based approaches to regulation, where compliance is determined by meeting regulatory objectives rather than rigid rules. Finally, it notes that implementing objectives-based regulation requires investment in regulatory infrastructure to support additional oversight while allowing flexibility.
FinTech companies are disrupting traditional banking through new technologies and business models. They are using social media, big data analytics, and transparency to attract younger consumers who are losing trust in banks. FinTech matters because it can reach the unbanked, build brands through social platforms, and mine consumer data in new ways. Younger generations especially trust algorithms and code over human bankers after the 2008 crisis. As these digital natives gain wealth, they represent a massive opportunity for FinTech firms to transform banking through greater efficiency and customer focus.
Fintech 2017 vision and insight - presentation at the Hanken School of Econ...Jouko Ahvenainen
Fintech 2017 vision and insight - presentation at the Hanken School of Economics: three main themes: 1) distributed finance, 2) open API ecosystem, 3) software bankers.
The document discusses the challenges that financial services firms face in digitally transforming their operations to meet the demands of modern customers. It notes that while significant investments have been made in technology, many firms are still in the early stages of the transformation process. The challenges include building mobile-friendly systems, improving user experiences, automating processes, fostering collaboration, and ensuring security. Cloud-based solutions like SunGard's can provide firms flexibility to scale solutions as needed and help accelerate their digital transformations.
DLT - Key industry requirements for an industry-wide platform by Fabian Vande...FinTech Belgium
DLT has the potential to bring efficiencies to the financial industry through information propagation, full traceability, simplified reconciliation, and high resiliency on a trusted distributed system. However, significant R&D is still needed to meet the industry's requirements before DLTs can be widely adopted at scale. SWIFT has been conducting customer meetings, developing an open source permissioned DLT platform, and a bond lifecycle proof of concept to advance DLT capabilities and standards. SWIFT's objective is to evolve its platform to offer DLT-based services to its members when the technology matures and firm use cases emerge.
Overview of industry trends and insights of Fortune 500 companies and startups' activities in the FinTech space. We cover banking tech (security, crm, analytics), payments (pos, money transfer, commerce), cyber currency (blockchain, bitcoin, wallets, cryptocurrency exchanges), business finance (lending, crowdfunding), personal finance (lending, wealth management, mortgage, credit), and alternative cores (banking, insurance).
London offers a favorable business environment and is a top location for businesses in Europe. It has a stable tax regime with low corporate tax rates and has attracted more European headquarters than any other European city in recent years. London provides access to a large talent pool, major transport links globally, and a diverse economy that is projected to continue growing rapidly. The document promotes London as one of the best locations in Europe for businesses and investment due to these competitive advantages.
The document discusses various topics related to financial technology (FinTech) and regulation. It provides an overview of FinTech developments like peer-to-peer lending, crowdfunding, blockchain/bitcoin, and mobile payments. It also examines objectives-based and principles-based approaches to regulation, where compliance is determined by meeting regulatory objectives rather than rigid rules. Finally, it notes that implementing objectives-based regulation requires investment in regulatory infrastructure to support additional oversight while allowing flexibility.
FinTech companies are disrupting traditional banking through new technologies and business models. They are using social media, big data analytics, and transparency to attract younger consumers who are losing trust in banks. FinTech matters because it can reach the unbanked, build brands through social platforms, and mine consumer data in new ways. Younger generations especially trust algorithms and code over human bankers after the 2008 crisis. As these digital natives gain wealth, they represent a massive opportunity for FinTech firms to transform banking through greater efficiency and customer focus.
Fintech 2017 vision and insight - presentation at the Hanken School of Econ...Jouko Ahvenainen
Fintech 2017 vision and insight - presentation at the Hanken School of Economics: three main themes: 1) distributed finance, 2) open API ecosystem, 3) software bankers.
The document discusses the challenges that financial services firms face in digitally transforming their operations to meet the demands of modern customers. It notes that while significant investments have been made in technology, many firms are still in the early stages of the transformation process. The challenges include building mobile-friendly systems, improving user experiences, automating processes, fostering collaboration, and ensuring security. Cloud-based solutions like SunGard's can provide firms flexibility to scale solutions as needed and help accelerate their digital transformations.
DLT - Key industry requirements for an industry-wide platform by Fabian Vande...FinTech Belgium
DLT has the potential to bring efficiencies to the financial industry through information propagation, full traceability, simplified reconciliation, and high resiliency on a trusted distributed system. However, significant R&D is still needed to meet the industry's requirements before DLTs can be widely adopted at scale. SWIFT has been conducting customer meetings, developing an open source permissioned DLT platform, and a bond lifecycle proof of concept to advance DLT capabilities and standards. SWIFT's objective is to evolve its platform to offer DLT-based services to its members when the technology matures and firm use cases emerge.
Overview of industry trends and insights of Fortune 500 companies and startups' activities in the FinTech space. We cover banking tech (security, crm, analytics), payments (pos, money transfer, commerce), cyber currency (blockchain, bitcoin, wallets, cryptocurrency exchanges), business finance (lending, crowdfunding), personal finance (lending, wealth management, mortgage, credit), and alternative cores (banking, insurance).
The document discusses a study by PwC on cities of opportunity and Auckland's performance. It summarizes that PwC evaluates 59 variables across 10 categories to measure urban performance. In PwC's 2014 study, Auckland ranked 16th globally. While Auckland has strengths in areas like quality of living, it lags in economic clout, transportation infrastructure, and attracting foreign investment. The summary calls on Auckland to capitalize on its advantages by improving these weaker areas to remain competitive among global cities.
The document summarizes the regulatory landscape around palm oil-based biofuels in Europe. It discusses the European Commission's proposal to cap first generation biofuels at 5% and impose indirect land use change factors that would make palm oil and biodiesel non-compliant. It also notes growing political pressure against palm oil in Europe from environmental groups and reviews implications for other policy areas like food labeling. The proposal faces further debate and decision by European Parliament and Council in 2013, requiring industry to make the case that palm oil sustainability has improved.
The document discusses the results of an fDi study ranking global cities of the future. Singapore was named the top global city of the future for the third year in a row, while London and Dublin retained the second and third positions, respectively. The study analyzed cities across various categories and broke them into groupings of megacities, major cities, and mid-sized/small cities. Bangalore ranked first among emerging market megacities, while Dublin was the top-scoring city in terms of foreign direct investment on a per capita basis.
PriceWaterhouseCoopers Cities of Opportunity 2012Brian Crotty
Cities of Opportunity 2012 analyzes the trajectory of 27 major cities and projects their development to 2025. It finds that London moves up to rank first, while New York maintains its strength. Beijing and Shanghai advance into the top 5 for economic clout and connectivity. The study also models "what if" scenarios around issues like technological unemployment and the rise of smart cities. Overall, it examines the economic, social, and technological trends shaping urban areas and their prospects.
Attaining a Competitive Advantage Through Urban SustainabilityJohn Batten
This presentation was given at the Hong Kong Institute of Engineers - Environmental Division Annual Forum on April 27th, 2017.
Hong Kong ranked 16th in the Sustainable Cities Index - 2016, published by Arcadis. Where can Hong Kong further sustainability?
www.arcadis.com/SCI2016
This document provides an overview of a breakfast briefing on wireless broadband and maximizing current investments through new services. The briefing covered several topics:
1) Mobile WiMAX certification is being updated, with the first Wave 2 products certified at 2.5GHz. Over 100 Mobile WiMAX products are expected to be certified by the end of 2008.
2) Challenges for Mobile WiMAX adoption include MIMO antenna size/weight, intellectual property issues, delays in spectrum auctions, and short battery life of client devices.
3) Next steps discussed generating unique applications to drive adoption, using Mobile WiMAX for both fixed and mobile services, and improving the user experience to differentiate it from other wireless alternatives.
The document discusses smart cities and provides examples of some of the top European smart cities, including Copenhagen, Stockholm, Amsterdam, Vienna, Paris, Berlin, London, Barcelona, and Munich. It outlines various initiatives and projects these cities have undertaken to become more sustainable, innovative, and efficient, such as investments in green technology and infrastructure, open data platforms, initiatives around mobility and transportation, and efforts to strengthen education and private-public partnerships. Many of these cities ranked highly in areas like smart economy, environment, governance, living, and mobility according to the Smart Cities Wheel framework.
The document discusses the importance of employee selection for organizations and some challenges they face in making effective hiring decisions. It notes that selecting the right employees is critical for business success but that organizations can improve their selection processes by better defining their talent needs and leveraging a variety of assessment tools to gain more knowledge about job candidates rather than relying on assumptions. The study aims to provide talent acquisition professionals with insights that can help them enhance their selection strategies.
The document discusses trends in the US natural gas market. It summarizes that:
1) Following a period of low gas prices and a building boom, concerns grew about potential domestic gas shortages and increased reliance on LNG imports.
2) However, extensive unconventional gas reserves were discovered, undermining the need for LNG. High domestic gas prices drove growth in unconventional supply.
3) Today, unconventional gas reserves are substantial but production is stabilizing as investment declines in response to lower prices. The future role of LNG imports remains uncertain.
Mobilemonday Buenos Aires Launch - Jari Tammisto Ceo Mobile MondayMOMO BUENOSAIRES
Mobile Monday is a global community of mobile industry visionaries, developers and influentials fostering cooperation and cross-border business development through virtual and live networking events to share ideas, best practices and trends from global markets.
London, Paris, and Frankfurt remain the top three cities for business according to the European Cities Monitor survey. Brussels moved back into fourth place ahead of Barcelona. Vienna saw the biggest rise, jumping six places to 22nd. Easy access to markets/customers, availability of quality staff, telecommunications quality, and transport links remain the most important factors for companies in deciding where to locate.
London, Paris, and Frankfurt remain the top three cities for business according to the European Cities Monitor survey. Easy access to markets, customers, and clients is the most important factor for companies in deciding where to locate. Berlin saw the biggest improvement in the rankings this year, rising six places. The survey provides insights into factors influencing business location decisions and the relative attractiveness and competitiveness of major European cities.
fDis Global Cities of the Future 2016/17 – FDI StrategyVictor Gridnev
Singapore has retained the top spot as fDi's Global City of the Future for 2016/17 due to its strong economic performance, with London in second place. Dublin has risen to third place, displacing Hong Kong, helped by its strength in attracting software and IT investments. Edinburgh ranked first in fDi's FDI Strategy category for its active promotion of the city as an investment destination through agreements with other cities and support services for new investors.
This document discusses megacities and climate change. It outlines that the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group represents 67 megacities that are home to 8% of the world's population and generate 21% of global GDP, but also produce 5% of global greenhouse gas emissions. The C40 convenes networks for peer-to-peer exchange and works to address financing challenges faced by cities, such as turning ideas into projects, understanding investor needs, and issues of creditworthiness that impact scaling up of climate solutions. Activities to help improve city creditworthiness include a new financing network, creditworthiness academy with the World Bank, city challenges analysis and action plans, and a mayoral-level pledge.
Cross-border cooperation in the electricity sector - the Nordic exampleGlobal Utmaning
The document discusses cross-border cooperation in the electricity sector through the Nordic example. It outlines the history of interconnections between Nordic countries dating back to 1963, which grew over time through the establishment of Nordel in 1992 to facilitate cooperation between transmission system operators. Nordel later joined ENTSO-E and helped coordinate the decarbonization of the power sector in the region through increasing renewable energy and electrification while maintaining a reliable grid through 2050. The context of cooperation has become more complex over time with new drivers like emissions pricing and public demand, as well as obstacles around political will, governance capacity, and handling interdependencies across borders.
Nordic Energy ways in Europe – Clean, Competitive and ConnectedGlobal Utmaning
Seminar: NORDIC ENERGY WAYS – WHAT‘S IN IT FOR US?
Monday, 2 June 2014
Anders Olsson, vice CEO E.ON Norden, presented the main conclusions of the report Nordic Energy Ways in Europe. Read the full report here: www.globalutmaning.se/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/Nordic-Energy-Ways-in-Europe1.pdf
This document discusses the role of private debt and credit growth in economic stability. It argues that pre-crisis orthodoxy viewed low inflation as sufficient for stability, but private debt growth fueled asset price booms and recessions. Credit growth for real estate and existing assets does not directly stimulate GDP but can inflate prices. To promote stability, policy should constrain private leverage growth and the dominance of real estate lending through higher bank capital requirements and countercyclical policies.
Ulf Dahlsten gave a presentation at the Stockholm School of Economics on March 22nd, 2014 about combating debt addiction and stabilizing the financial system. He argued that more needs to be done as the system has issues like extreme pro-cyclicality, underestimating endogenous risks, excessive money creation, growing private debts, asset inflation, and complexity. He focused on these problems and asked questions about addressing excessive money creation, the danger of private debt buildup, curbing asset inflation without hurting the economy, and what central banks, regulators, and politicians can do to help.
Challenges with high household debt levels - a Swedish perspectiveGlobal Utmaning
A presentation held by Lord Adair Turner from INET at Global Utmaning's and the Swedish House of Finance's seminar "Combating the Debt Addiction" at the Stockholm School of Economics, Thursday May 22, 2014.
Ed Groark presents State of the World 2014: Governing for sustainabilityGlobal Utmaning
Ed Groark, Chairman of the Worldwatch institute, presented the annual report State of the World, this year themed "Governing for sustainability" at a seminar hosted by Norden i Fokus and Global Utmaning on the 7th of May 2014.
Energiewende - Status of the German Energy reformsGlobal Utmaning
A presentation given in Stockholm, March 20th 2014, by Dr. Ralf Bartels, Industriegewerkschaft Bergbau, Chemie, Energie
Head of Department Energy Reforms / Sustainability
at Global Challenge's and E.ON's seminar "A Nordic Energiewende?"
The document discusses a study by PwC on cities of opportunity and Auckland's performance. It summarizes that PwC evaluates 59 variables across 10 categories to measure urban performance. In PwC's 2014 study, Auckland ranked 16th globally. While Auckland has strengths in areas like quality of living, it lags in economic clout, transportation infrastructure, and attracting foreign investment. The summary calls on Auckland to capitalize on its advantages by improving these weaker areas to remain competitive among global cities.
The document summarizes the regulatory landscape around palm oil-based biofuels in Europe. It discusses the European Commission's proposal to cap first generation biofuels at 5% and impose indirect land use change factors that would make palm oil and biodiesel non-compliant. It also notes growing political pressure against palm oil in Europe from environmental groups and reviews implications for other policy areas like food labeling. The proposal faces further debate and decision by European Parliament and Council in 2013, requiring industry to make the case that palm oil sustainability has improved.
The document discusses the results of an fDi study ranking global cities of the future. Singapore was named the top global city of the future for the third year in a row, while London and Dublin retained the second and third positions, respectively. The study analyzed cities across various categories and broke them into groupings of megacities, major cities, and mid-sized/small cities. Bangalore ranked first among emerging market megacities, while Dublin was the top-scoring city in terms of foreign direct investment on a per capita basis.
PriceWaterhouseCoopers Cities of Opportunity 2012Brian Crotty
Cities of Opportunity 2012 analyzes the trajectory of 27 major cities and projects their development to 2025. It finds that London moves up to rank first, while New York maintains its strength. Beijing and Shanghai advance into the top 5 for economic clout and connectivity. The study also models "what if" scenarios around issues like technological unemployment and the rise of smart cities. Overall, it examines the economic, social, and technological trends shaping urban areas and their prospects.
Attaining a Competitive Advantage Through Urban SustainabilityJohn Batten
This presentation was given at the Hong Kong Institute of Engineers - Environmental Division Annual Forum on April 27th, 2017.
Hong Kong ranked 16th in the Sustainable Cities Index - 2016, published by Arcadis. Where can Hong Kong further sustainability?
www.arcadis.com/SCI2016
This document provides an overview of a breakfast briefing on wireless broadband and maximizing current investments through new services. The briefing covered several topics:
1) Mobile WiMAX certification is being updated, with the first Wave 2 products certified at 2.5GHz. Over 100 Mobile WiMAX products are expected to be certified by the end of 2008.
2) Challenges for Mobile WiMAX adoption include MIMO antenna size/weight, intellectual property issues, delays in spectrum auctions, and short battery life of client devices.
3) Next steps discussed generating unique applications to drive adoption, using Mobile WiMAX for both fixed and mobile services, and improving the user experience to differentiate it from other wireless alternatives.
The document discusses smart cities and provides examples of some of the top European smart cities, including Copenhagen, Stockholm, Amsterdam, Vienna, Paris, Berlin, London, Barcelona, and Munich. It outlines various initiatives and projects these cities have undertaken to become more sustainable, innovative, and efficient, such as investments in green technology and infrastructure, open data platforms, initiatives around mobility and transportation, and efforts to strengthen education and private-public partnerships. Many of these cities ranked highly in areas like smart economy, environment, governance, living, and mobility according to the Smart Cities Wheel framework.
The document discusses the importance of employee selection for organizations and some challenges they face in making effective hiring decisions. It notes that selecting the right employees is critical for business success but that organizations can improve their selection processes by better defining their talent needs and leveraging a variety of assessment tools to gain more knowledge about job candidates rather than relying on assumptions. The study aims to provide talent acquisition professionals with insights that can help them enhance their selection strategies.
The document discusses trends in the US natural gas market. It summarizes that:
1) Following a period of low gas prices and a building boom, concerns grew about potential domestic gas shortages and increased reliance on LNG imports.
2) However, extensive unconventional gas reserves were discovered, undermining the need for LNG. High domestic gas prices drove growth in unconventional supply.
3) Today, unconventional gas reserves are substantial but production is stabilizing as investment declines in response to lower prices. The future role of LNG imports remains uncertain.
Mobilemonday Buenos Aires Launch - Jari Tammisto Ceo Mobile MondayMOMO BUENOSAIRES
Mobile Monday is a global community of mobile industry visionaries, developers and influentials fostering cooperation and cross-border business development through virtual and live networking events to share ideas, best practices and trends from global markets.
London, Paris, and Frankfurt remain the top three cities for business according to the European Cities Monitor survey. Brussels moved back into fourth place ahead of Barcelona. Vienna saw the biggest rise, jumping six places to 22nd. Easy access to markets/customers, availability of quality staff, telecommunications quality, and transport links remain the most important factors for companies in deciding where to locate.
London, Paris, and Frankfurt remain the top three cities for business according to the European Cities Monitor survey. Easy access to markets, customers, and clients is the most important factor for companies in deciding where to locate. Berlin saw the biggest improvement in the rankings this year, rising six places. The survey provides insights into factors influencing business location decisions and the relative attractiveness and competitiveness of major European cities.
fDis Global Cities of the Future 2016/17 – FDI StrategyVictor Gridnev
Singapore has retained the top spot as fDi's Global City of the Future for 2016/17 due to its strong economic performance, with London in second place. Dublin has risen to third place, displacing Hong Kong, helped by its strength in attracting software and IT investments. Edinburgh ranked first in fDi's FDI Strategy category for its active promotion of the city as an investment destination through agreements with other cities and support services for new investors.
This document discusses megacities and climate change. It outlines that the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group represents 67 megacities that are home to 8% of the world's population and generate 21% of global GDP, but also produce 5% of global greenhouse gas emissions. The C40 convenes networks for peer-to-peer exchange and works to address financing challenges faced by cities, such as turning ideas into projects, understanding investor needs, and issues of creditworthiness that impact scaling up of climate solutions. Activities to help improve city creditworthiness include a new financing network, creditworthiness academy with the World Bank, city challenges analysis and action plans, and a mayoral-level pledge.
Similar to Cities of-opportunity-margareta-irenaeus-pw c-globalutmaning15oct2012 (14)
Cross-border cooperation in the electricity sector - the Nordic exampleGlobal Utmaning
The document discusses cross-border cooperation in the electricity sector through the Nordic example. It outlines the history of interconnections between Nordic countries dating back to 1963, which grew over time through the establishment of Nordel in 1992 to facilitate cooperation between transmission system operators. Nordel later joined ENTSO-E and helped coordinate the decarbonization of the power sector in the region through increasing renewable energy and electrification while maintaining a reliable grid through 2050. The context of cooperation has become more complex over time with new drivers like emissions pricing and public demand, as well as obstacles around political will, governance capacity, and handling interdependencies across borders.
Nordic Energy ways in Europe – Clean, Competitive and ConnectedGlobal Utmaning
Seminar: NORDIC ENERGY WAYS – WHAT‘S IN IT FOR US?
Monday, 2 June 2014
Anders Olsson, vice CEO E.ON Norden, presented the main conclusions of the report Nordic Energy Ways in Europe. Read the full report here: www.globalutmaning.se/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/Nordic-Energy-Ways-in-Europe1.pdf
This document discusses the role of private debt and credit growth in economic stability. It argues that pre-crisis orthodoxy viewed low inflation as sufficient for stability, but private debt growth fueled asset price booms and recessions. Credit growth for real estate and existing assets does not directly stimulate GDP but can inflate prices. To promote stability, policy should constrain private leverage growth and the dominance of real estate lending through higher bank capital requirements and countercyclical policies.
Ulf Dahlsten gave a presentation at the Stockholm School of Economics on March 22nd, 2014 about combating debt addiction and stabilizing the financial system. He argued that more needs to be done as the system has issues like extreme pro-cyclicality, underestimating endogenous risks, excessive money creation, growing private debts, asset inflation, and complexity. He focused on these problems and asked questions about addressing excessive money creation, the danger of private debt buildup, curbing asset inflation without hurting the economy, and what central banks, regulators, and politicians can do to help.
Challenges with high household debt levels - a Swedish perspectiveGlobal Utmaning
A presentation held by Lord Adair Turner from INET at Global Utmaning's and the Swedish House of Finance's seminar "Combating the Debt Addiction" at the Stockholm School of Economics, Thursday May 22, 2014.
Ed Groark presents State of the World 2014: Governing for sustainabilityGlobal Utmaning
Ed Groark, Chairman of the Worldwatch institute, presented the annual report State of the World, this year themed "Governing for sustainability" at a seminar hosted by Norden i Fokus and Global Utmaning on the 7th of May 2014.
Energiewende - Status of the German Energy reformsGlobal Utmaning
A presentation given in Stockholm, March 20th 2014, by Dr. Ralf Bartels, Industriegewerkschaft Bergbau, Chemie, Energie
Head of Department Energy Reforms / Sustainability
at Global Challenge's and E.ON's seminar "A Nordic Energiewende?"
The document defines a green economy as one that is low-carbon, resource-efficient, and socially inclusive according to the UNEP. It also includes a diagram showing the interdependencies between different levels of trust, politics, markets, resources, and social relations that are necessary for a sustainable green economy. Weaknesses in any of these areas can undermine the transition to a green economy.
Research questions for a green, inclusive economyGlobal Utmaning
This document summarizes a presentation on research questions for a green, inclusive economy. The presentation covered three main topics:
1. Metrics - It discussed developing alternative metrics to GDP like national wealth accounts and a prosperity metric based on solving human problems.
2. Vision - It addressed the need for systems thinking and considering renewable vs. exhaustible natural resources.
3. Transition - Key research questions were presented around the politics and innovation required for an economic transition, including governance mechanisms, necessary institutions, and business models within planetary boundaries.
The presentation concluded by noting the career prospects for economists to work on these important transition questions and called for mutual understanding between disciplines.
A critical review and considerations: Green economy, what is it?Global Utmaning
This document provides a summary and critique of a proposal to build models for a sustainable Germany by 2040. It notes that the proposal makes some good points but its economic understanding is still simplistic and it is insufficient in design and scope. The summary recommends using systems analysis throughout, integrated assessment modeling to analyze past data and scenarios, and involving experienced systems analysts. It concludes that the proposal has some blind spots and needs to better connect the whole system, address issues like population and trade, and engage policy/government to enable real paradigm shifts.
2. Introduktion
5e upplagan av PwC:s och Partnership for New York City gemensamma
studie
27 städer worldwide
60 variabler inom 10 områden
Stockholm placerar sig som nummer 5 av 27.
New York, London, Toronto och Paris topp 4
PwC 1
3. How the cities rank overall
Stockholm 23
Moscow 8
London 26 Berlin 16
Toronto 25 Paris 24
San Francisco 22
New York 27 Istanbul 4 Seoul 14
Los Angeles 15 Chicago 19 Beijing 11
Madrid 13 Milan 12
Shanghai 9 Tokyo 18
Abu Dhabi 6
Mexico City 7 Hong Kong 20
Mumbai 1
Kuala Lumpur 10
Singapore 21
São Paulo 2 Johannesburg 3
High
Medium Buenos Aires 5 Sydney 17
Low
PwC Partnership for New York City 2
4. 2012 års resultat innehåller några överraskningar
1 New York – London ligger I
hälarna men NY balans avgör
1 London – klättrar från nr 6 ifjol.
City gateway avgör (OS)
3 Toronto – Balansen avgör
4 Paris – Klättar 4 placeringar— 1a i
Demographics & Livability, 2a i City
Gateway and Economic Clout trots
eurozons krisen
5 Stockholm – Åter 1a in
Intellectual Capital and Health och
Safety & Security
Gamla stan Stockholm
PwC Partnership for New York City 3
5. 2012 års studie visar att Stockholm presterar
fantastiskt bra
• Intellektuellt kapital
• Hållbarhet
• Livskvalitet
• Kollektivtrafik
PwC Partnership for New York City 4
6. ..men det finns också utmaningar!
• Grundläggande
kunskaper i matematik
och naturvetenskap
• Kostnader i
kollektivtrafiken
• Bostadsfrågan
• Utländska investeringar
ISLbiljett
PwC Partnership for New York City 5
7. Topp 3 inom varje område
#1 #2 #3
Intellectual capital and innovation Stockholm Toronto Paris
Technology readiness Seoul San Francisco New York 4
Transportation and infrastructure Singapore Toronto & Seoul* 5
Health, safety and security Stockholm Toronto Sydney
Sustainability and the natural
Sydney Toronto & San Francisco* 6
environment
New York &
Economic clout Beijing Paris
London* 12
Ease of doing business Singapore Hong Kong New York 6
Cost Berlin Seoul Kuala Lumpur 12
Hong Kong &
Demographics and livability Paris San Francisco 8
Sydney
City gateway London Paris Berlin 21
* Tied for second or third place. In case of a tie for second place, no city is in #3 position
PwC Partnership for New York City 6
8. Hållbarhet i Cities of Opportunity
30
25
20.6 20.2 20.2
20 18.2 17.8 17.6 17.2
15
10
5
0
Natural disatser risk Thermal comfort Recycled waste
Air pollution Public park space Score tot
PwC 7
9. Hållbarhet på ett annat sätt
30
25 22
19 20 19
20 18
15
15
10
5
0
Stockholm London Toronto San Paris New York
Fransisco
Air pollution Cost of public transport
Mass transit coverage Public park space
Traffic congestion Public transport system
Score tot
PwC 8
EDITORIAL NOTE—Enter your own city’s strong points from the 2012 study results in the “City Today” section. Build from the Fact Sheet you received September 17 on your city plus pages 40-77 of Cities of Opportunity. … Of course, add in your own local city knowledge as needed.
EDITORIAL NOTE—Enter your own city’s challenges from the 2012 study. You can build from the Fact Sheet you received on your city plus pages 40-77 of Cities of Opportunity. … Of course, add in your own local city knowledge as needed. …. You can also combine, and make page 19+20 into one page of strengths and challenges if that works better. … Or add as many pages on your city and its strengths and challenges as you’d like.