Kampala offers a higher living standard for expatriates than Nairobi,
according to a survey by London-based Mercer Insights, a global
consultancy offering talent advisory services.
The Ugandan capital is ranked 169th globally but third in the continent after South Africa's Durban (85) and Cape Town (91).
Nairobi is ranked eighth in Africa and 186th globally. It also lags
behind Cairo (170), Blantyre (177), Maputo (178) and Banjul (184).
However, Rwanda's Kigali, Tanzania's Dar es Salaam and Ethiopia's Addis Ababa are placed lower at 189, 198 and 205 respectively.
Mercer's 2015 Quality of Living survey, released two weeks ago,
covered 230 cities worldwide. Data was analysed between September and
November last year.
The annual survey is intended to help multinational companies and
other employers compensate staff fairly when placing them on
international assignments.
"A city's quality-of-living standards can be an important variable for employers to consider," Mercer said in a statement.
Vienna in Austria tops the rankings followed by Zurich in Switzerland, Auckland in New Zealand and Munich in Germany.
The city with the lowest living standard is Baghdad in Iraq. It is
followed closely by Bangui in Central African Republic, Port-au-Prince
in Haiti and Sudan's Khartoum.
According to Mercer, typical expatriate incentives include a
quality-of-living allowance and a mobility premium. The former is a
location-related "hardship" allowance, which compensates for a decrease
in the quality of living between home and host locations.
Consequently, employers have to raise the allowance for cities ranked
lower, for instance in the case of Nairobi compared to Kampala.
On the other hand, a mobility premium caters for the inconvenience of
having to work in another country. Mercer says a vast majority of
multinational firms usually provide the allowances separately.
"Companies need to determine their expatriate compensation packages
rationally, consistently, and systematically. Providing incentives to
reward and recognise the efforts that employees and their families make
when taking on international assignments remains a typical practice,
particularly for difficult locations," the firm said.
Mercer evaluates local living conditions such as consumer goods,
housing, recreation, socio-political and economic environments, schools
and education standards, utilities and transport, and medical and health
considerations.
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