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.
http://pwc.to/13MJEh4
Cette étude compare la situation de 27 villes, toutes des capitales de la finance, du commerce et de la culture, selon dix catégories regroupant des critères aussi bien économiques que sociaux.
London moves up markedly but New York shows continued strength
London advances four spots from last year to a virtual lock with New York at the top and finishes first in city gateway, a new category that measures international connectivity. New York performs well across the board but wins no individual category, showing diverse strengths. Paris rises four spots to number four this year, coming in first in demographics and livability and narrowly second to London in city gateway, showing that despite the eurozone’s continuing economic instability, The long-term investment that builds a great urban center also lends resilience to weather the storms. Overall, relative bands of performance remain similar to 2011.
The document discusses co-living trends in Asia-Pacific cities and provides metrics to evaluate each city's potential for co-living growth. It examines six attributes: tech/financial hub status, venture capital deals, housing affordability, university population, general population/human development index, and quality of life. Based on these attributes, the top four cities highlighted are Singapore, Beijing, Mumbai, and Manila. The document also provides brief highlights on the co-living opportunities and rankings for these cities.
Ciudades con mayor proyección de futuro 2014PwC España
+info: http://pwc.re/15ebi
El informe "Ciudades con mayor proyección de futuro" analiza un grupo de 30 grandes ciudades de todo el mundo -entre las que se encuentra Madrid- consideradas como buenos ejemplos de centros urbanos atractivos, dinámicos, llenos de oportunidades y de futuro. El análisis se realiza a partir de diez grandes indicadores y 59 subindicadores de carácter económico, social y cultural.
Etude PwC "Cities of Opportunity" (2014)PwC France
www.pwc.com/cities
Avec un recul de 2 places, Paris quitte le peloton des 5 premières villes mondiales (avec Stockholm). Elle demeure néanmoins parmi les 10 meilleures pour 7 de nos 10 indicateurs, avec une amélioration dans les domaines de la santé et de la sécurité.
District parent session on technology today and future 2011 feb 15Brian Kuhn
a session given to parents on current trends in technology used for learning and teaching, examples shared from classrooms through video, demos of powerful free learning tools, anticipation of the future, gathered feedback on a new idea Parent Spaces, etc.
La ética es un tema complejo con muchas perspectivas a considerar. Debemos pensar cuidadosamente sobre cómo nuestras acciones afectan a los demás y promover el bienestar general de la humanidad. Un enfoque compasivo que respeta la dignidad de todas las personas es fundamental para abordar los desafíos éticos de nuestro tiempo.
http://pwc.to/13MJEh4
Cette étude compare la situation de 27 villes, toutes des capitales de la finance, du commerce et de la culture, selon dix catégories regroupant des critères aussi bien économiques que sociaux.
London moves up markedly but New York shows continued strength
London advances four spots from last year to a virtual lock with New York at the top and finishes first in city gateway, a new category that measures international connectivity. New York performs well across the board but wins no individual category, showing diverse strengths. Paris rises four spots to number four this year, coming in first in demographics and livability and narrowly second to London in city gateway, showing that despite the eurozone’s continuing economic instability, The long-term investment that builds a great urban center also lends resilience to weather the storms. Overall, relative bands of performance remain similar to 2011.
The document discusses co-living trends in Asia-Pacific cities and provides metrics to evaluate each city's potential for co-living growth. It examines six attributes: tech/financial hub status, venture capital deals, housing affordability, university population, general population/human development index, and quality of life. Based on these attributes, the top four cities highlighted are Singapore, Beijing, Mumbai, and Manila. The document also provides brief highlights on the co-living opportunities and rankings for these cities.
Ciudades con mayor proyección de futuro 2014PwC España
+info: http://pwc.re/15ebi
El informe "Ciudades con mayor proyección de futuro" analiza un grupo de 30 grandes ciudades de todo el mundo -entre las que se encuentra Madrid- consideradas como buenos ejemplos de centros urbanos atractivos, dinámicos, llenos de oportunidades y de futuro. El análisis se realiza a partir de diez grandes indicadores y 59 subindicadores de carácter económico, social y cultural.
Etude PwC "Cities of Opportunity" (2014)PwC France
www.pwc.com/cities
Avec un recul de 2 places, Paris quitte le peloton des 5 premières villes mondiales (avec Stockholm). Elle demeure néanmoins parmi les 10 meilleures pour 7 de nos 10 indicateurs, avec une amélioration dans les domaines de la santé et de la sécurité.
District parent session on technology today and future 2011 feb 15Brian Kuhn
a session given to parents on current trends in technology used for learning and teaching, examples shared from classrooms through video, demos of powerful free learning tools, anticipation of the future, gathered feedback on a new idea Parent Spaces, etc.
La ética es un tema complejo con muchas perspectivas a considerar. Debemos pensar cuidadosamente sobre cómo nuestras acciones afectan a los demás y promover el bienestar general de la humanidad. Un enfoque compasivo que respeta la dignidad de todas las personas es fundamental para abordar los desafíos éticos de nuestro tiempo.
This document provides an overview of the Cities of Opportunity 2011 study. Some key points:
- The study analyzes 26 global cities across 10 indicators and 66 variables to understand what makes cities successful.
- New York ranks first overall this year, with Toronto, San Francisco, Stockholm, and Sydney rounding out the top five.
- The study has expanded over time to include more cities and provide a more holistic analysis of economic and quality of life factors.
- This year's edition includes in-depth discussions of issues like education measurement, regional management, sustainability, and traffic congestion.
- Six new cities - Madrid, Moscow, Istanbul, Abu Dhabi, Berlin, and San Francisco
This document provides an overview of the Cities of Opportunity 2011 study. Some key points:
- The study analyzes 26 global cities across 10 indicators and 66 variables to understand what makes cities successful.
- New York ranks first overall this year, with Toronto, San Francisco, Stockholm, and Sydney rounding out the top five.
- The study has expanded over time to include more cities and provide a more holistic analysis of economic and quality of life factors.
- This year's edition includes in-depth discussions of issues like education measurement, regional management, sustainability, and traffic congestion.
- Six new cities - Madrid, Moscow, Istanbul, Abu Dhabi, Berlin, and San Francisco
Dublin City Council - City and Competitiveness Research OverviewJamie Cudden
This document discusses Jamie Cudden's work with Dublin City Council on branding and promoting Dublin globally and locally. It provides an overview of recent publications and research projects focused on Dublin's role in the national and global economy. It also discusses Dublin's participation in benchmarking and indicator reports to measure the city's performance compared to other international cities. The document highlights how Dublin must compete with other cities globally for investment, talent, and tourism in the current economic environment.
The fifth edition of the report ranks Stockholm first followed by London, Paris, Singapore and Copenhagen.
The 2014 edition of the Networked Society City Index examines and ranks 40 cities from around the world, looking at their performance, challenges and opportunities in terms of ICT, sustainability and development. The extensive research gives us a glimpse into the future of the city.
The report also continues to explore the connection between ICT maturity and triple bottom line development in cities around the world.
One of the key findings from the report is the fact that cities with a low ICT maturity tend to be improving their ICT maturity faster than high performing cities, indicating a catch-up effect. Many cities also have the opportunity to leapfrog by avoiding expensive and increasingly obsolete physical infrastructure and instead move straight ahead to advanced mobile technology.
Stockholm’s top ranking is thanks to its well-developed ICT infrastructure, extremely well-developed open data and e-services and high-quality access to both fixed and mobile broadband, thanks to extensive infrastructure rollouts.
Sustainable Cities Index 2016 Global WebLisa Campbell
The 2016 Sustainable Cities Index ranks 100 global cities based on their performance across three pillars of sustainability: social (people), environmental (planet), and economic (profit). Zurich ranks first overall by scoring highly in planet and profit, though it reveals a split personality by ranking lower for people. Well-established European cities dominate the top 15, while Asian financial hubs rank highly for profit but lower for people. Cities in emerging economies generally rank lower, facing sustainability challenges across all pillars. To improve, city leaders should balance social, environmental and economic needs by putting people at the heart of sustainability plans.
The 2016 Sustainable Cities Index ranks 100 global cities based on their performance across three pillars of sustainability: social (people), environmental (planet), and economic (profit). Zurich ranks first overall by scoring highly in planet and profit, though it reveals a split personality by ranking lower for people. Well-established European cities dominate the top 15, while Asian financial hubs also rank highly. Cities in emerging economies generally rank lower, with a clear link between economic development and environmental sustainability. While no city effectively balances all three pillars, putting people at the heart of sustainability strategies could help cities improve their overall ranking.
Sustainable Cities Index 2016 Global WebJohn Batten
The 2016 Sustainable Cities Index ranks 100 global cities based on their performance across three pillars of sustainability: social (people), environmental (planet), and economic (profit). Zurich ranks first overall by scoring highly in planet and profit, though it reveals a split personality by ranking lower for people. Well-established European cities dominate the top 15, while Asian financial hubs rank highly for profit but lower for people. Cities in emerging economies generally rank lower, facing sustainability challenges across all pillars. To improve, city leaders should balance social, environmental and economic needs by putting people at the heart of sustainability plans.
Professor Richard Burdett discusses the challenges facing cities due to globalization, immigration, jobs, social exclusion, and sustainability. While cities have an ability to innovate, there are disconnects between urban change and policy that must be addressed. Policymakers need to create frameworks for sustainable urban development and adapt cities to diverse populations, changing work environments, and increased connectivity through technology. Ultimately, cities must address these challenges through environmentally sustainable solutions to problems like housing, transportation, energy use, and climate change.
This document summarizes a presentation given by Prof Greg Clark CBE at the ICCA Congress in Dubai in November 2018 on "The Crisis of Cities". Some key points:
1. The world is one-third of the way through a 100-year cycle of urbanization where the global population will stabilize and around 85% of people will live in cities, establishing the global system of cities for the next century.
2. Four major trends - global urbanization, peak population, climate change, and exponential technology - are synchronized over this century, termed "The Metropolitan Century".
3. Cities face challenges of managing growth, including issues like housing affordability, congestion, segregation, and opposition to
Networked Society City Index 2014 - InfographEricsson
The document presents the results of the Networked Society City Index 2014, which ranks 40 cities around the world based on their performance and opportunities in terms of ICT, sustainability, and development. Stockholm ranked first overall, followed by London, Paris, Singapore, and Copenhagen in the top five. The index found that 21st century ICT gives cities new ways to address challenges by optimizing resources, improving connectivity, and increasing economic prosperity and social inclusion. It also provides three predictions about how ICT will shape the sustainable urban future: GDP will be redefined to capture new scopes of growth, collaboration will change the core of organizations, and ICT will provide new opportunities to meet future challenges.
Citi aims to partner with cities on urban transformation by leveraging its expertise in financing infrastructure projects, driving efficiency reforms, and digitizing public services. As urbanization accelerates, Citi works with governments and clients to address challenges around modernizing infrastructure, improving efficiency, and fostering sustainable growth. Citi's solutions include financing urban infrastructure projects, implementing city-wide efficiency initiatives, and digitizing services to make them more accessible.
The ideas explored in Connected Cities chart the emergence of a political and economic phenomenon-the city as the new connected republic of the 21st Century. Simon Willis, Global Head of eGovernment for the Internet Business Solutions Group at Cisco Systems, has collated essays that show how different cities, at the cutting edge of the process, are grappling with the various stages of connectivity.
El estudio analiza treinta grandes urbes de todo el mundo -a partir de 67 variables agrupadas en diez grandes indicadores-, consideradas buenos ejemplos de cómo debe ser una ciudad moderna y atractiva. Londres vuelve a ocupar la primera posición por delante de Singapur y Toronto. Madrid se sitúa en el lugar número 16 y destaca por su capacidad e influencia económica.
The 2014 edition of the Networked Society City Index examines and ranks 40 cities from around the world, looking at their performance, challenges and opportunities in terms of ICT, sustainability and development. The extensive research gives us a glimpse into the future of the city.
The report also continues to explore the connection between ICT maturity and triple bottom line development in cities around the world.
Redefining urban life - Ericsson Business ReviewEricsson France
Adding mobility, broadband and the cloud to connectivity makes ideas affordable and accessible for anyone, anywhere, anytime.
The Networked Society will fuel a creative explosion, and that explosion will start in the cities.
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.
The third edition of the Smart City Expo World Congress brought together over 9,000 participants from 300 cities on five continents to discuss challenges facing cities and potential solutions. The three-day event featured presentations from over 320 speakers on topics like energy, mobility, governance, technology and innovation. It also included an exhibition area for 160 companies to showcase innovative smart city projects and technologies. The Congress provided a forum for public and private sector representatives to network, share knowledge and explore new business opportunities in the growing market for intelligent urban technologies.
The document discusses the challenges of rapid urbanization and how some cities are addressing this by building new cities from scratch or expanding existing ones. Project managers overseeing new city developments must ensure locations are close to but not duplicating other urban areas, and plans are flexible enough to adapt to changing technologies and population growth over time. Successful new cities incorporate sustainability and public transit to attract residents and businesses.
Megacities provide some of the world’s most dynamic and stimulating places to live. But they also bring their own specific challenges. The maturity level of a city can help identify the most appropriate ICT solutions.
For more information on the Networked Society visit: http://www.ericsson.com/networkedsociety
ANA programmatic-financial-fog 22-5-17Brian Crotty
This study analyzed over 16 billion programmatic advertising impressions purchased by 7 major advertisers through 5 demand-side platforms. The study found that:
1) Across the full supply chain, 58 cents of each advertising dollar went to media inventory and 42 cents went to fees and costs of the programmatic supply chain.
2) Looking just at demand-side costs, 72 cents of each dollar went to media inventory and 28 cents went to demand-side fees and costs.
3) Programmatic fees can add 45% to the cost of display inventory and 35% to the cost of video inventory on average for advertisers.
The study provides recommendations to help advertisers gain more control and transparency over their program
Babelfish articles oct 16 mar 17 28-3-17 reduxBrian Crotty
In a world where it is increasingly difficult to keep up, let alone stay ahead, I am sharing a collection of meaty articles that passed my screens over the last 6 months. I have divided into 6 topics - The first articles in each section are important reading for those who can´t afford to tread water.
More Related Content
Similar to PriceWaterhouseCoopers Cities of Opportunity 2012
This document provides an overview of the Cities of Opportunity 2011 study. Some key points:
- The study analyzes 26 global cities across 10 indicators and 66 variables to understand what makes cities successful.
- New York ranks first overall this year, with Toronto, San Francisco, Stockholm, and Sydney rounding out the top five.
- The study has expanded over time to include more cities and provide a more holistic analysis of economic and quality of life factors.
- This year's edition includes in-depth discussions of issues like education measurement, regional management, sustainability, and traffic congestion.
- Six new cities - Madrid, Moscow, Istanbul, Abu Dhabi, Berlin, and San Francisco
This document provides an overview of the Cities of Opportunity 2011 study. Some key points:
- The study analyzes 26 global cities across 10 indicators and 66 variables to understand what makes cities successful.
- New York ranks first overall this year, with Toronto, San Francisco, Stockholm, and Sydney rounding out the top five.
- The study has expanded over time to include more cities and provide a more holistic analysis of economic and quality of life factors.
- This year's edition includes in-depth discussions of issues like education measurement, regional management, sustainability, and traffic congestion.
- Six new cities - Madrid, Moscow, Istanbul, Abu Dhabi, Berlin, and San Francisco
Dublin City Council - City and Competitiveness Research OverviewJamie Cudden
This document discusses Jamie Cudden's work with Dublin City Council on branding and promoting Dublin globally and locally. It provides an overview of recent publications and research projects focused on Dublin's role in the national and global economy. It also discusses Dublin's participation in benchmarking and indicator reports to measure the city's performance compared to other international cities. The document highlights how Dublin must compete with other cities globally for investment, talent, and tourism in the current economic environment.
The fifth edition of the report ranks Stockholm first followed by London, Paris, Singapore and Copenhagen.
The 2014 edition of the Networked Society City Index examines and ranks 40 cities from around the world, looking at their performance, challenges and opportunities in terms of ICT, sustainability and development. The extensive research gives us a glimpse into the future of the city.
The report also continues to explore the connection between ICT maturity and triple bottom line development in cities around the world.
One of the key findings from the report is the fact that cities with a low ICT maturity tend to be improving their ICT maturity faster than high performing cities, indicating a catch-up effect. Many cities also have the opportunity to leapfrog by avoiding expensive and increasingly obsolete physical infrastructure and instead move straight ahead to advanced mobile technology.
Stockholm’s top ranking is thanks to its well-developed ICT infrastructure, extremely well-developed open data and e-services and high-quality access to both fixed and mobile broadband, thanks to extensive infrastructure rollouts.
Sustainable Cities Index 2016 Global WebLisa Campbell
The 2016 Sustainable Cities Index ranks 100 global cities based on their performance across three pillars of sustainability: social (people), environmental (planet), and economic (profit). Zurich ranks first overall by scoring highly in planet and profit, though it reveals a split personality by ranking lower for people. Well-established European cities dominate the top 15, while Asian financial hubs rank highly for profit but lower for people. Cities in emerging economies generally rank lower, facing sustainability challenges across all pillars. To improve, city leaders should balance social, environmental and economic needs by putting people at the heart of sustainability plans.
The 2016 Sustainable Cities Index ranks 100 global cities based on their performance across three pillars of sustainability: social (people), environmental (planet), and economic (profit). Zurich ranks first overall by scoring highly in planet and profit, though it reveals a split personality by ranking lower for people. Well-established European cities dominate the top 15, while Asian financial hubs also rank highly. Cities in emerging economies generally rank lower, with a clear link between economic development and environmental sustainability. While no city effectively balances all three pillars, putting people at the heart of sustainability strategies could help cities improve their overall ranking.
Sustainable Cities Index 2016 Global WebJohn Batten
The 2016 Sustainable Cities Index ranks 100 global cities based on their performance across three pillars of sustainability: social (people), environmental (planet), and economic (profit). Zurich ranks first overall by scoring highly in planet and profit, though it reveals a split personality by ranking lower for people. Well-established European cities dominate the top 15, while Asian financial hubs rank highly for profit but lower for people. Cities in emerging economies generally rank lower, facing sustainability challenges across all pillars. To improve, city leaders should balance social, environmental and economic needs by putting people at the heart of sustainability plans.
Professor Richard Burdett discusses the challenges facing cities due to globalization, immigration, jobs, social exclusion, and sustainability. While cities have an ability to innovate, there are disconnects between urban change and policy that must be addressed. Policymakers need to create frameworks for sustainable urban development and adapt cities to diverse populations, changing work environments, and increased connectivity through technology. Ultimately, cities must address these challenges through environmentally sustainable solutions to problems like housing, transportation, energy use, and climate change.
This document summarizes a presentation given by Prof Greg Clark CBE at the ICCA Congress in Dubai in November 2018 on "The Crisis of Cities". Some key points:
1. The world is one-third of the way through a 100-year cycle of urbanization where the global population will stabilize and around 85% of people will live in cities, establishing the global system of cities for the next century.
2. Four major trends - global urbanization, peak population, climate change, and exponential technology - are synchronized over this century, termed "The Metropolitan Century".
3. Cities face challenges of managing growth, including issues like housing affordability, congestion, segregation, and opposition to
Networked Society City Index 2014 - InfographEricsson
The document presents the results of the Networked Society City Index 2014, which ranks 40 cities around the world based on their performance and opportunities in terms of ICT, sustainability, and development. Stockholm ranked first overall, followed by London, Paris, Singapore, and Copenhagen in the top five. The index found that 21st century ICT gives cities new ways to address challenges by optimizing resources, improving connectivity, and increasing economic prosperity and social inclusion. It also provides three predictions about how ICT will shape the sustainable urban future: GDP will be redefined to capture new scopes of growth, collaboration will change the core of organizations, and ICT will provide new opportunities to meet future challenges.
Citi aims to partner with cities on urban transformation by leveraging its expertise in financing infrastructure projects, driving efficiency reforms, and digitizing public services. As urbanization accelerates, Citi works with governments and clients to address challenges around modernizing infrastructure, improving efficiency, and fostering sustainable growth. Citi's solutions include financing urban infrastructure projects, implementing city-wide efficiency initiatives, and digitizing services to make them more accessible.
The ideas explored in Connected Cities chart the emergence of a political and economic phenomenon-the city as the new connected republic of the 21st Century. Simon Willis, Global Head of eGovernment for the Internet Business Solutions Group at Cisco Systems, has collated essays that show how different cities, at the cutting edge of the process, are grappling with the various stages of connectivity.
El estudio analiza treinta grandes urbes de todo el mundo -a partir de 67 variables agrupadas en diez grandes indicadores-, consideradas buenos ejemplos de cómo debe ser una ciudad moderna y atractiva. Londres vuelve a ocupar la primera posición por delante de Singapur y Toronto. Madrid se sitúa en el lugar número 16 y destaca por su capacidad e influencia económica.
The 2014 edition of the Networked Society City Index examines and ranks 40 cities from around the world, looking at their performance, challenges and opportunities in terms of ICT, sustainability and development. The extensive research gives us a glimpse into the future of the city.
The report also continues to explore the connection between ICT maturity and triple bottom line development in cities around the world.
Redefining urban life - Ericsson Business ReviewEricsson France
Adding mobility, broadband and the cloud to connectivity makes ideas affordable and accessible for anyone, anywhere, anytime.
The Networked Society will fuel a creative explosion, and that explosion will start in the cities.
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.
The third edition of the Smart City Expo World Congress brought together over 9,000 participants from 300 cities on five continents to discuss challenges facing cities and potential solutions. The three-day event featured presentations from over 320 speakers on topics like energy, mobility, governance, technology and innovation. It also included an exhibition area for 160 companies to showcase innovative smart city projects and technologies. The Congress provided a forum for public and private sector representatives to network, share knowledge and explore new business opportunities in the growing market for intelligent urban technologies.
The document discusses the challenges of rapid urbanization and how some cities are addressing this by building new cities from scratch or expanding existing ones. Project managers overseeing new city developments must ensure locations are close to but not duplicating other urban areas, and plans are flexible enough to adapt to changing technologies and population growth over time. Successful new cities incorporate sustainability and public transit to attract residents and businesses.
Megacities provide some of the world’s most dynamic and stimulating places to live. But they also bring their own specific challenges. The maturity level of a city can help identify the most appropriate ICT solutions.
For more information on the Networked Society visit: http://www.ericsson.com/networkedsociety
Similar to PriceWaterhouseCoopers Cities of Opportunity 2012 (20)
ANA programmatic-financial-fog 22-5-17Brian Crotty
This study analyzed over 16 billion programmatic advertising impressions purchased by 7 major advertisers through 5 demand-side platforms. The study found that:
1) Across the full supply chain, 58 cents of each advertising dollar went to media inventory and 42 cents went to fees and costs of the programmatic supply chain.
2) Looking just at demand-side costs, 72 cents of each dollar went to media inventory and 28 cents went to demand-side fees and costs.
3) Programmatic fees can add 45% to the cost of display inventory and 35% to the cost of video inventory on average for advertisers.
The study provides recommendations to help advertisers gain more control and transparency over their program
Babelfish articles oct 16 mar 17 28-3-17 reduxBrian Crotty
In a world where it is increasingly difficult to keep up, let alone stay ahead, I am sharing a collection of meaty articles that passed my screens over the last 6 months. I have divided into 6 topics - The first articles in each section are important reading for those who can´t afford to tread water.
Ebit - Buscape- #34 webshoppers english 2016Brian Crotty
In the first half of 2016, the Brazilian e-commerce market faced challenges from the country's economic and political troubles as well as increased product prices. However, e-commerce sales still grew 5.2% nominally during this period. Major highlights included a 7% increase in average ticket size to R$403.46 and a 31% rise in active online consumers to 23.1 million. While order volumes declined slightly by 2% due to unemployment and weaker class C purchases, mobile sales grew strongly and made up 23% of sales by June 2016. Many e-commerce companies had to rethink their strategies and cut costs to survive in this difficult environment.
Great mobile campaigns strive to increase brand relevance, drive emotional connections and solve problems, choose immersive, visually-compelling ad formats, create their own engagement ecosystem through apps and sites, set mobile as a cornerstone and build with other channels, and drive change and social impact. Emerging areas for growth include leveraging chatbots and virtual screen demos to drive trial, accelerating adoption of augmented and virtual reality, gaining a better understanding of engagement, and implementing targeting that's more balanced with creative quality.
The document discusses trends in content marketing and storytelling for 2017. It notes that the days of conventional brand storytelling are over due to everyone having the ability to create and share content. In 2017, brands will need to step back and let audiences shape their own stories through more personal, instant content like short videos and live streams. It also suggests that brands focus on storydoing rather than storytelling by focusing on human interactions and experiences with their brand. Live content is growing in popularity and brands will need to embrace more raw, unedited content styles to engage modern audiences.
Winterberry group the state of consumer data onboarding november 2016Brian Crotty
The document discusses consumer data onboarding, which is the process of matching owned consumer data with consumers' digital attributes to create a comprehensive identity for marketing. It details the history and evolution of onboarding from probabilistic household-level matching to increased demand for more accurate deterministic matching of individuals. The proliferation of connected devices has made identity matching more complex. Both probabilistic and deterministic processes are still required for onboarding, as deterministic is more precise but probabilistic allows for greater scale. The document provides an overview of the onboarding process and market.
The document summarizes key points from Deloitte's 2016 Tech Trends report, which examines eight technology trends that will likely disrupt businesses in the next 18-24 months. These include blockchain, augmented reality, the Internet of Things, reimagining core systems, autonomic platforms, industrialized analytics, and the social impact of exponential technologies.
It discusses how every company is now a technology company and how digital innovation is driving changes across business models and competition. It also emphasizes that CIOs have an opportunity to shape their organizations' futures by transforming business as usual and harnessing innovation responsibly.
The report challenges readers to think beyond just adopting new technologies but to use emerging trends to create real business
MEC CES 2017-key-takeaways-and-trends-finalBrian Crotty
The document provides details about CES 2017, including key facts and figures. It summarizes that CES 2017 attracted over 150,000 attendees, 3,800 exhibitors from around the world, covered over 2.6 million square feet, and launched over 20,000 new electronics products. Major themes included technologies like autonomous vehicles, robotics, VR/AR, and artificial intelligence.
This document summarizes a report by Mindshare on trends for 2017, with a focus on virtual, augmented, and mixed reality technologies (collectively referred to as VR/AR/MR). It discusses the current state of these technologies and their potential for growth. Key points include:
- VR/AR/MR have been in development for decades but are now gaining more attention due to improvements in technology. However, widespread adoption still faces barriers of cost, usability, and a lack of compelling applications and content.
- Experts provide opinions on the technologies' development and potential. They believe mobile phones will be key to scaling experiences, and that advertising could use VR to tell immersive stories and demonstrate products,
Kantar-millward-brown Media and-digital-predictions 2017Brian Crotty
Brands will step up efforts to connect with the emerging Gen Z consumer segment in 2017. Marketers will need to offer opportunities for Gen Z to interact and co-create with brands through digital platforms. Transparency about a brand's values and purpose will also be important to this demographic. Brands will also need to experiment with new formats like augmented reality and virtual reality to engage Gen Z in an imaginative and visual way. Consistency of brand experience across touchpoints will be another key focus area for marketers as consumers interact with brands through various channels. Content marketing techniques will continue to evolve through new technologies and more targeted, personalized creative content.
Edelman Digital's 2017 Trends Report explores emerging trends that will impact brands in the coming year. The report focuses on changes observed in 2016 and covers topics like paid media, influencer marketing, search, entertainment, conversational technologies, B2B marketing, and blockchain. The report provides both observations on these trends as well as recommendations for how brands can leverage new technologies and approaches to drive business results. Key trends discussed include the growth of immersive content like virtual and augmented reality, changes in mobile video consumption, the rise of live streaming video, and new opportunities for using wearable technologies in content creation.
This document summarizes 10 technology trends that are expected to become more important for marketers in 2016, focusing on the rise of closed ecosystems and the development of artificial intelligence. The trends involve the growth of "walled gardens" like Snapchat Discover and Facebook Instant Articles, new challenges for advertising from services like Netflix and ad blocking, the evolution of personalized search on mobile and through virtual assistants, the increasing role of messaging apps in sharing content and integrating other services, and the application of artificial intelligence to areas like maps, image recognition, sentiment analysis, and dynamic pricing. Marketers will need to adapt by working within these closed ecosystems, focusing on native content formats, and exploring how to provide customer service through new messaging platforms.
Sharing a collection of articles that I found interesting over the last 6 months - First 20 are important reading for those who can´t afford to tread water.
O documento discute insights sobre o comportamento digital global e regional em 2015 de acordo com relatórios da comScore. Ele fornece informações sobre audiências digitais, uso multiplataforma, categorias como vídeo online e redes sociais, e foca na geração Millennials. O relatório também analisa insights para as regiões da EMEA, LATAM e Ásia-Pacífico.
Este documento fornece um resumo do relatório WebShoppers da 32a edição do 1o semestre de 2015. O relatório contém quatro capítulos analisando o desempenho do comércio eletrônico no primeiro semestre, expectativas para o segundo semestre, pesquisa sobre dispositivos móveis e índice Fipe/Buscapé. Além disso, apresenta considerações finais e informações sobre a metodologia e benefícios da pesquisa realizada pela E-bit.
JWT The future-100--trends-and-change-to-watch-in-2016Brian Crotty
This document discusses emerging trends to watch in 2016 across various industries including culture, technology, food/drink, travel/hospitality, and brands/marketing. Some key trends highlighted are the growing emphasis on empathy in thought leadership, the increasing influence of China in Hollywood entertainment through investments and audiences, and the rise of surreal, hyper-plasticized imagery in fashion/beauty as an alternative to ultra-realism. Technology continues to permeate all industries, while consumers are demanding that brands demonstrate strong value systems and environmental stewardship.
Sharing a collection of articles that I found interesting over the last 6 months - First 20 are important reading for those who can´t afford to tread water.
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Winterberry & USA IAB - Marketing data white paper Jan 2015Brian Crotty
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Winterberry & USA IAB - Marketing data white paper Jan 2015
PriceWaterhouseCoopers Cities of Opportunity 2012
1. Abu Dhabi Hong Kong Madrid New York Singapore
Beijing Istanbul Mexico City Paris Stockholm
Berlin Johannesburg Milan San Francisco Sydney
Buenos Aires Kuala Lumpur Moscow São Paulo Tokyo
Chicago London Mumbai Seoul Toronto
Los Angeles Shanghai
www.pwc.com
www.pfnyc.org
Cities of Opportunity 2012
Cities of Opportunity
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which promote environmentally appropriate, socially beneficial, and economically viable management of the world’s
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3. Looking to the future of 27 cities at the center
of the world economy
In this fifth edition of Cities of Opportunity, 2.5 percent of the population. By the quarter- with some of this uncertainty, “what if”
PwC and the Partnership for New York City century, they will house 19 million more scenarios test the future of our cities under
again examine the current social and economic residents, produce 13.7 million additional different conditions. The clouds hold silver
performance of the world’s leading cities. We jobs, and generate $3.3 trillion more in GDP linings for some cities in terms of greater
also add a future dimension that probes the if population follows UN projections and employment and wealth. But storms roll in for
shape of city economies to come. Together, economic progress remains modest. As growth others. The differing “what if” scenarios stress
looking at 2012 results and ahead toward occurs, the symbiotic relationship between the need for flexible thinking simply to deal
the possibilities in 2025, we seek to provide East and West is likely to continue: Emerging with foreseeable changes, not to mention
a realistic framework for thought and action cities will skyrocket in jobs and population, the unexpected turns.
beginning with 27 of the world’s most signifi- but developed cities will retain the spending
cant cities—on one hand, the engine of the power, as well as the consumer and corporate To flesh out the empirical picture, we spoke
modern global economy and on the other, demand, to drive growth. One side will still to a broad scope of leaders on issues from the
the heart of much of our shared culture. need the other to move ahead. long range and philosophical to the practical
and immediate. This includes E.O. Wilson, the
It is precisely because of the importance of Meantime, our analysis shows that each naturalist; Bill Bratton, former New York and
cities and the need to deepen knowledge of city represents an economic ecosystem in its Los Angeles head of police; Narayana Murthy,
urban issues that we undertake the study. The own right, built around mutually supportive founder of Infosys; Andrew Chan and Peter
effort to question and understand where cities economic and social strengths as well as an Chamley, two leaders of the global engineering
are and where they are headed benefits all intertwined fabric of jobs—not just the profes- firm Arup, based in Hong Kong and London,
of us in a world urbanizing like never before. sionals in bright skyscrapers but all those who respectively; Wim Elfrink, Cisco’s head of
This includes the officials and policymakers turn the lights on every morning from retailers Smart + Connected Communities; and David
setting the course, businesses invested in city and teachers to nurses and cooks, from crime Miller, former Toronto mayor and World
well-being, and the citizens who build their fighters to street cleaners. Maintaining healthy Bank special advisor on urban issues.
lives in thousands of city neighborhoods world- balance is a cornerstone of urban resilience.
wide, rich or poor, picturesque or prosaic. All in all, we hope to provide insight into
Our jobs analysis also reveals surprising an urban world in which all of us are “in it
Statistics tell some of the story: Today, our patterns, vulnerabilities, and dependencies, together,” making as strong a case for joint
27 cities account for nearly 8 percent of world as cities journey toward 2025 with more than thought and action among cities as there is
gross domestic product (GDP) but only a few clouds on the horizon. To come to grips for self-interest and competition.
Yours sincerely,
Robert Moritz Kenneth I. Chenault Terry J. Lundgren
Chairman and Senior Partner Chairman and CEO Chairman, President and
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP American Express Co. Chief Executive Officer
Macy’s Inc.
Co-chairman
Partnership for New York City Co-chairman
Partnership for New York City
4. What makes a city tick?
“Justice remains the appropriate name for certain social utilities which are vastly more
important, and therefore more absolute and imperative, than any others,” John Stuart Mill
wrote in Utilitarianism in 1861. He added, “education and opinion, which have so vast a power
over human character, should so use that power to establish in the mind of every individual an
indissoluble association between his own happiness and the good of the whole.” Many of those
we spoke with this year in developing Cities of Opportunity agree. The foundations of healthy
cities remain rule of law and safety and security today, as well as strong education to foster
those qualities for future generations.
Overview The city tomorrow
Projecting urban possibilities to 2025
10 19 24 Population in millions 30
How the cities rank From butcher to baker to The ants, the man, and Where the jobs are
London moves up, memory-stick maker the city A detailed look at six big or
merging 2012 2025
Asian cities improve Projecting urban trends to E.O. Wilson views city life telling employment sectors
2025 in jobs, production, through the lenses of nature
and population and reason
14 22 28 34
The study’s methodology The shape of city The 2025 baseline scenario “What if” technological
economies to come unemployment dawns
Refinements continue on Jobs in business services,
a solid foundation Mutual self-interest unites wholesale and retail, and … in a slow growth,
Mumbai
developed and developing cities manufacturing anchor the cities urbanized world? And four
other scenarios that explore
unexpected directions
Shanghai
Moscow
Tokyo
24 Berlin Beijing
Paris 21 Seoul
w York 23 3 Istanbul 13 9 London Seoul São Paulo
Milan Abu Dhabi Shanghai 2 9 Tokyo
1
10 Hong Kong
9 Istanbul
Mumbai 6 Kuala Lumpur
Mexico City
Singapore 14
o Paulo
11
Johannesburg Singapore New York
6 Sydney
6 27 Hong Kong 24
16
Buenos Aires Sydney 23 W
e’re quickly coming to an agreement as a nation and as
Berlin a world—that we really have to improve education systems.
aris
Toronto We need far better methods of teaching. We need better incentives
Johannesburg
for teachers, and especially to include education in science and
Los Angeles
Madrid technology because we are now entering a techno-scientific world.
Chicago
uala Lumpur
5 10 15
2 | Cities of Opportunity | PwC
Value of output
5. The city today
Results for 2012
42 46 51 56
Intellectual capital Booting up holistic Health, safety and security Transportation
and innovation sustainability From Aristotle to Bratton and infrastructure
Generating the skills that Wim Elfrink discusses to Chan, securing citizens’ A major revision focuses
generate growth Cisco’s and his own passage well-being is key on internal mobility
to urban India
44 50 52 58
City gateway Technology readiness Bill Bratton transformed The ins and outs, overs and
urban law and order unders, of a great city
A new indicator measures The competition for digital
a city’s global connections advantage continues to intensify … in New York and Los Angeles … can be engineered for efficiency,
and explains how to achieve Peter Chamley of Arup explains
that fundamental priority on
the toughest city streets
46 52 58
T
he biggest lesson is that you H
ealth, safety, and security is the number one requirement for a W
hat we often lack now are
have to think out of the box. city. If you don’t have security, you don’t have health and safety, projects having a champion
You can’t think about all and all the other pillars that support democracy will weaken, who will get hold of them
these [urban] challenges in a including education and the economy. If you have a shaky and make it their sole aim
traditional pattern. We can’t platform, they are all going to be shaky. to deliver them.
build cities like we did in the
past. A transformational shift
has to happen.
Partnership for New York City | Cities of Opportunity | 3
6. The city today
Results for 2012
62 67 72 76
Sustainability and the Demographics and livability Economic clout Cost
natural environment W
e know it when we see A
sia rises, but we’ll always Comparative advantages
W
eighing the effectiveness it, despite a certain je ne have Paris can keep advanced
of public policy sais quoi economies competitive
64 68 74
Cold comfort comes Andrew Chan of Ease of doing business
in Toronto Arup engineers sees C
ompetitive cities know
emerging cities how to stay competitive
…
from civility and economic
balance, former mayor David … through the prism of
Miller explains resilience and sustainability
64 68
T
o understand a city’s quality of life, see if you can walk around F
or the average person in a developing city, the most important
at any time of day or night. You don’t want to be walking around factor is safety, health, and security. Efficiency is also important—
a city at 11 at night if it’s not interesting and exciting, and that’s and that relates to transport or connectivity and how you lay
a test of a neighborhood and a city as a whole. things out through good urban planning. This ability to get
around efficiently is probably second in importance only to safety.
4 | Cities of Opportunity | PwC
7. Cities at the edge Reference
Megacities, megachallenges
79 84 92
Smaller world, bigger cities Narayana Murthy Key to the variables
E
merging cities will need to of Infosys links Understanding the datapoints
grow, and invest, even more … India’s urban future to the that underpin the study
to enhance their citizens’ power of private enterprise,
quality of life leadership, governance,
and transparency
83 88 On the web
Forecast of investment A tale of three cities
See www.pwc.com/cities for
spending Athens, Dublin, and Dubai interactive modelers; videos,
… shows tremendous need weather the Great Recession podcasts, and full-length
in emerging megacities in different ways versions of the interviews;
detailed data definitions
and sources
cow
Beijing
l Shanghai
Dhaka Tokyo
Chongqing
Delhi Osaka
arachi Guangzhou
Shenzhen Manila
Kolkata 84
83 T
o bring prosperity to the T
here is terrible corruption and little public security in my city
Jakarta
vast majority of Indians, in Bangladesh. ... But what can we do? We are not politicians
we need to enhance our or powerful people. We just want to survive. ... That’s why
governance system, enhance people come to New York from all over the world. There is law
our transparency and and order. —New York cab driver
accountability, combat
corruption, and enhance
our infrastructure.
unicipal population data used in the main Cities of Opportunity comparison.
Partnership for New York City | Cities of Opportunity | 5
8. Highlights
Cities of Opportunity 2012 covers a broad range of findings
and ideas. Here is a selection of notable ones.
London moves up markedly broad technological transformation replacing
workers without the right skills. Not unexpect-
but New York shows continued strength edly in this “what if” scenario, employment
London advances four spots from last year to a virtual lock with New York at the top and finishes and GDP growth fall across our spectrum of
first in city gateway, a new category that measures international connectivity. New York performs 27 cities. Beijing, Shanghai, and São Paulo
well across the board but wins no individual category, showing diverse strengths. Paris rises four lose the most jobs, but London and Tokyo
spots to number four this year, coming in first in demographics and livability and narrowly second follow close behind, showing that neither
to London in city gateway, showing that despite the eurozone’s continuing economic instability, developed nor developing cities escape
the long-term investment that builds a great urban center also lends resilience to weather the sweeping transformation. London and Sydney
storms. Overall, relative bands of performance remain similar to 2011. sacrifice more annual GDP than any city
except Johannesburg—all suggesting the
old adage, plan for the best but prepare for
Beijing and Shanghai advance the worst.
The two Chinese cities move to the top 5 in economic clout and city gateway along with
London, Paris, and New York. Balanced progress across a range of social and economic “What if” smart cities prevail?
indicators represents the next step for Shanghai and Beijing in transforming exceptional The answer is anything but a no-brainer.
growth into sustainable performance at the top tier of world capitals. London, Tokyo, New York, Seoul, and Paris
fare best in employment growth if cities
prosper based on knowledge as well as
technological and travel connections—
A virtuous circle of social Size does matter. But is a big city light seemingly the right stuff for the modern
and economic strengths enough on its feet to dance? world. Overall, our 27 cities lose 4 million
Our thesis remains that a city’s healthy growth Continuation of the “urban renaissance” jobs compared to the 2025 baseline projection.
and long-term resilience depends on “positive is no guarantee in difficult economic times. Perhaps counter-intuitively, this occurs
reinforcement in the network of economic and Uncertainty seems to have replaced the expec- because greater productivity will cut the need
social development,” to borrow from scientist tation of return to a steady state of economic for workers. However, higher trade might
E.O. Wilson. When great quality-of-life factors growth, and signs of potential transformation reasonably accompany such a scenario and
like schools, healthcare, housing, and safety can be seen in everything from jobs to the generate even more jobs than productivity
are balanced with strong businesses and solid weather that greets us every morning. shaves away.
infrastructure, the formula is right to pave city No matter the size, wealth, or advancement
streets with optimism if not yet gold. of modern cities, flexibility will be the If we follow our urban bliss, London
keyword for planners and policymakers and Sydney lie on the yellow brick road
“Another factor that makes things hopeful is considering the future. In Cities of Opportunity, our measures of
what chemists call autocatalytic reactions,” health, safety and security, demographics
Wilson adds. “That is, when you get a product It doesn’t take a perfect storm to scuttle and livability, and sustainability represent
created by putting certain ingredients city futures a good proxy for quality of life—the urban
together, the product itself becomes a catalyst. Looking at a range of uncertainties, we tested characteristic for which many professionals
The reaction speeds up and you get more and what it would mean for cities if technological, and businesses appear to be searching. If that
more products like that, and it just takes off economic, and sociopolitical forces go in the proves correct and more of us follow our urban
exponentially. You won’t get it quite in a social wrong direction and hamper economic health bliss, London, Sydney, Singapore, Paris, and
system, but you could get something like it.” and employment growth between now and Berlin benefit the most in terms of jobs gained
2025—a realistic enough scenario given the by 2025; Stockholm the most in terms of
If there’s bad news for cities it’s the same
stubborn failure of jobs to return and hints of additional GDP. Today’s developing cities
as in science: “One of the hardest things to
lose the most jobs and wealth.
do sometimes is to get a reaction started.”
6 | Cities of Opportunity | PwC
9. When it comes to the share of city makes us creative.” Cities like San Francisco, housing correlates in a highly positive way
employment, the biggest gorillas in with its mutually supportive ties to Silicon with the attributes of an economically strong
the room throw their weight around Valley, show the dividends of collaboration. city. They may be cold, dark, or far from the
disproportionately (for better or worse) madding crowd, but Stockholm, Toronto, and
Cities of invention ... or reinvention Sydney again demonstrate balanced success in
Financial and business services, manufactur-
History shows the capacity of cities to build education and health, safety and security.
ing, wholesale, and retail sectors anchor many
city economies in 2012. The first two account from the ground up, as many emerging cities
Can the champions rest their feats?
for as much as a third of jobs. That includes are doing now, and to rebuild from rubble,
Shanghai, where one in three workers is in as many developed cities have done after war. The Olympic effort may be ended in London,
manufacturing, and Milan, Paris, London, Success comes from collective will and the but cities worldwide require leaders with the
Beijing, San Francisco, and Stockholm, where ability to align economic, governmental, and vision and drive to realize transformative proj-
financial and business services predominate. social forces. Where there’s a common will, ects like Baron Haussmann in 19th-century
there’s a way forward. Paris, Daniel Burnham of Chicago at the turn
Wholesale and retail accounts for more than of the 20th century, and Robert Moses in mid-
one in five jobs in Hong Kong, Kuala Lumpur, Growing cities with growling appetites for 20th century New York. While their programs
Moscow, Mumbai, Mexico City, and Istanbul. capital investment were sometimes criticized, they “certainly
To keep up with the great gains in population delivered,” to paraphrase Peter Chamley,
While these profiles may be changing—for head of infrastructure at Arup. Many credit
and employment by quarter-century, some
instance, as emerging cities begin to diversify Singapore’s modern planners with that vision
emerging cities will have to invest significantly.
away from reliance on manufacturing— to see and build.
Shanghai and Beijing will need to invest what
over-dependencies and imbalances can leave
represents 42 percent of their GDP just to
cities vulnerable. Chamley, for his part, notes a recent triumph
satisfy forecast growth from 2012 to 2025. For
in his home city. “The construction industry
Surf (with the pack) or (defend your) turf? Mumbai, it’s 35 percent. London, by contrast,
can look at the Olympics with pride. Wonder-
only requires 17 percent and Stockholm 19
The question of competing or collaborating ful facilities have been delivered very quickly
percent to meet the forecast of investment
within and among communities is as old as and on budget. ... It has been a great success in
spending relative to growth.
the seven hills of Rome. Today’s cities need to regenerating that part of London.” But many
blend some of each strategic outlook into their Most happy cities are alike ... but every other developed and developing cities face
planning. On one hand, cities can benefit by unhappy city is unhappy in its own way high hurdles including bureaucratic delay,
aligning interests and seeking joint action in political gridlock, and systemic corruption.
Athens, Dublin, and Dubai each endured the To recall the principal behind Burnham’s
a world urbanizing faster and creating more
same economic crisis. But each climbed out legacy, which continues to benefit Chicagoans:
funding needs than cities are empowered to
of the hole or stayed mired in their problems “Make no little plans, for they have no magic
address. Yet, cities are where the buck stops in
in their own way—illustrating the extent to to stir men’s blood. ... Make big plans. Aim
terms of the need to get results. Competition
which it is more the differences rather than high in hope and work.”
with other cities, whether for a new factory
the commonalities that distinguish economic
or new museum, is a fact of life.
breakdown and recovery in a city.
Learn more
As scientist E.O. Wilson told us: “The solution
Make my city healthy, wealthy, and wise See www.pwc.com/cities for interactive modelers,
to our problems is not to expect complete
(not necessarily in that order) videos, podcasts, and full-length versions of the
harmony among cooperating people, but to
realize that group distinctions and group Most of the leaders we spoke to emphasize the interviews; detailed data definitions and sources.
competition and individual-level competition need for a safe and secure city as the keystone
within groups is just the way we are. What we of a healthy community. After that, good edu-
really need to do is try to find ... a harmonious cation is most widely cited as a springboard
solution. ... It’s that ferment of the center, for future success. In fact, our own Cities of
between the two opposing impulses, which Opportunity analyses have shown that good
Partnership for New York City | Cities of Opportunity | 7
11. London moves up overall, Asian cities move
ahead in some areas, and the future
moves in patterns we seek to understand
A cityless man is like “a solitary piece in and hospitals to accommodate growth. Both
checkers,”1 simply out of the game, Aristotle mature and emerging cities depend on each
wrote 2,400 years ago, putting urban life in other to balance their economies. And “only by
a clear social context. Then, the polis literally acknowledging our extreme interdependence
meant a free city that made laws, sometimes will we make the fishbowl effect work for
wars, and on a deeper level signified the com- humanity rather than against it,” in the words
munal existence under the rule of morality of Li Congjun, head of China’s official news
that only humans are capable of living.2 Being agency.4 Big uncertainties hang over the entire
a citizen was a badge of honor for the 30,000 picture from destabilizing climate change to
or so politai among Athens’s 140,000 or so political and social tension to technological
men, women, children, and slaves. transformation. Realistically, continuation
of the 20-year “urban renaissance” cannot be
Today many more of us live in cities. Central taken as any more inevitable than the long
Athens houses over 1 million people, with climb in house prices that crashed to set off
about 3.8 million in the metropolitan area. the economic crisis. A considered look at the
Citizenship embraces more than just men. future is in order.
And the birthplace of democracy is now better
known as the epicenter of the eurozone crisis. The report adds an entire section that
(See “A tale of three cities,” page 88.) projects from our 2012 results the sectoral
employment, production, and population of
However, the foundations of urban life remain our 27 cities in 2025. We examine what might
the same. City dwellers still prize living under occur if different city characteristics prove
the rule of law and strive to develop the rich- more or less important in attracting invest-
est quality of social and economic life they ment and driving growth, and how cities will
can. How to govern justly and well—how be affected if the world economy changes
best to move the city ahead—is still a point of course. We also veer away from our 27-city
debate. In ancient Greece, Aristotle’s biggest study group to examine those cities at the
theoretical rival on the topic, Socrates, his
immediate forbear and self-described “gad- 1 Politics, I.I.9-10 as translated by I.F. Stone in The Trial of
Socrates, 1989, Anchor Books, page 98.
fly” of the state,3 favored governing by expert 2 The Trial of Socrates, I.F. Stone translating on page 10 from
managers rather than the democratic citizenry Politics 2.1.9-10, “It is man’s ‘special distinction from other animals
that he alone has the perception of good and bad and of the just
he viewed as a herd. Today, political debates and the unjust.’ It is this intrinsic sense of justice that gives man his
around the world appear equally as difficult social instinct, his ‘impulse’ as Aristotle calls it, to a social life, and
makes man ‘a political animal in a greater measure than any bee
(often lacking the intellectual rigor Socrates or any gregarious animal.’” Interestingly, E.O. Wilson, a renowned
and Aristotle brought to the party). scientific observer and thinker today on sociobiology and human
nature, parallels Aristotle in speaking to Cities of Opportunity (see
page 24), as do a range of others we interviewed including ex-New
With that look back for context, Cities of York and Los Angeles head of police Bill Bratton on the primacy
of justice in community-building.
Opportunity notably looks ahead this year
3 As related principally by Plato, as well as Xenophon and
to frame city futures around probable direc- Aristophanes, in that Socrates left no writings of his own.
tions and unforeseen turns in the road at a 4 “Frictions are hardly avoidable, but what’s important is for the
crucial time. The Great Recession continues to two sides to handle their differences through coordination based
on equality and mutual understanding. Only by acknowledging
A street in the Beaubourg area of Paris as hamper mature city governments. Stubborn our extreme interdependence will we make the fishbowl effect
seen from the Pompidou Center. joblessness adds a serious problem. Emerging work for humanity rather than against it.” Li Congjun, president
of Xinhua News Agency, China’s official press agency, wrote
cities are faced with a flood of immigrants in The New York Times, July 18, 2012, in “Rebalancing the
and a pressing need to build adequate roads, Global Economy.”
water, waste, and energy systems, schools,
Partnership for New York City | Cities of Opportunity | 9
12. How the cities rank
Intellectual capital Technology Transportation Health, safety
and innovation readiness and and security
infrastructure
fulcrum of change today: first, the megacities 27 New York 189 91 101 97
mushrooming especially throughout the 26 London 184 79 99 96
emerging world; and second, Athens, Dublin,
25 Toronto 198 66 109 116
and Dubai, three cities that suffered through
and managed the economic crisis, each in 24 Paris 194 65 99 89
its own way. 23 Stockholm 205 89 103 119
22 San Francisco 191 93 92 107
We chose to extend our investigation into the
future because this seems a natural time to 21 Singapore 122 80 114 103
stick our finger into the air and gain a sense of 20 Hong Kong 150 71 103 71
the direction of things to come. After decades
19 Chicago 170 81 92 109
in which overall growth led to a common,
often unspoken expectation of return to 18 Tokyo 167 80 107 93
healthy economic equilibrium, we’re now at a 17 Sydney 179 56 66 114
moment when a few trends indicate a change
16 Berlin 147 48 95 101
in the norm, if not advancement to a new
plateau in the industrial/information revolu- 15 Los Angeles 171 79 59 91
tion. Economic growth remains slow in many 14 Seoul 137 96 109 61
places and municipal budgets strained in 119 44 99 81
13 Madrid
mature cities. More puzzling, employment
refuses to bounce back to anything near levels 12 Milan 131 34 86 95
before the boom years that preceded the Great 11 Beijing 82 49 71 35
Recession. Joblessness, especially among 10 Kuala Lumpur 66 41 80 55
the young, persists at high levels. Scientific
9 Shanghai 99 48 80 38
advances could be playing a role as “techno-
logical unemployment” finally dawns long 8 Moscow 109 54 73 19
after Keynes coined the term. 7 Mexico City 82 24 93 42
Urban immigration levels never known before 6 Abu Dhabi 87 28 89 93
(certainly not beyond New World melting pots 5 Buenos Aires 63 28 93 43
like New York and Chicago or Buenos Aires 4 Istanbul 45 33 67 24
and São Paulo) threaten the social and politi-
3 Johannesburg 49 23 32 46
cal fabric of many cities. When factors like
rising income inequality and pervasive social 2 São Paulo 60 22 54 16
networking are folded in, cities can become a 1 Mumbai 48 27 70 25
volatile mix. And ultimately, while cities may
lack the power or funding of national govern-
ments, they are the ones that must act as
all these forces play out in their streets,
businesses, and homes. As David Miller,
former mayor of Toronto, told us, “Mayors the promise that innovation offers in urban Asian cities perform very well in a number of
often don’t have time to wait, and they are clusters. (See The city tomorrow, pages 18-39.) categories. Shanghai and Beijing move up
very practical. Mayor LaGuardia [of New York the ratings, performing in the top five in
in the 1930s] quite famously said ‘there is In terms of today, the study finds that despite economic clout and city gateway, the latter a
no Republican or Democratic way to pick up a revision of many of our data variables and new indicator that measures global attractive-
garbage.’ You become less ideological. ... reorganization of indicator categories, relative ness and accessibility. Four of the five leaders
City governments are good at action.” bands of performance generally continue. Yet in inner-city transportation and infrastructure
noteworthy changes do occur. sit in Asia—Singapore, Seoul, Tokyo, and
Positive forces are at work also. These include
Hong Kong—versus last year when all five
the upside potential of globalization and the London moves up from number six last year,
leaders were in America or Europe. External
increasing attraction of cities to travelers of doing very well in many categories and finish-
city connections like air traffic also weighed
all sorts, the expanding growth of urban ing narrowly as the number-two city behind
on the scoring. In demographics and livability,
service sectors supported by rising demand New York. The top third is rounded out by
Paris moves up 7 spots from the mid-ranks
and higher levels of education and training, Toronto, Paris, which advances four spots
last year to number one with the indicator cat-
opportunities to build new or retrofit crum- from 2011, Stockholm, San Francisco,
egory recast in 2012 to stress livability. Paris,
bling, old infrastructures, and, of course, Singapore, Hong Kong, and Chicago.
10 | Cities of Opportunity | PwC
13. Sustainability Economic Ease of doing Cost Demographics City gateway Score
and the natural clout business and livability
environment
83 119 182 70 59 121 1,112
65 119 181 71 72 145 1,111
101 98 175 89 75 69 1,096
86 120 137 58 82 143 1,073
88 83 161 86 73 55 1,062
101 76 154 86 76 85 1,061
69 110 202 71 75 99 1,045
59 99 198 78 78 108 1,015
72 67 158 93 67 88 997
58 92 156 51 59 111 974
103 90 147 54 78 77 964
91 68 135 124 74 72 955
79 59 160 99 65 92 954
58 81 146 108 37 82 915
82 76 136 96 55 115 903
89 90 111 71 51 69 827
65 125 80 79 48 135 769
55 64 154 106 53 87 761
44 118 56 83 40 123 729
86 95 62 77 50 87 712
53 60 117 102 43 57 673
33 68 89 90 57 16 650
74 67 60 80 48 41 597
49 61 78 102 34 85 578
55 42 102 100 46 39 534
64 67 88 57 49 50 527
58 82 59 93 23 30 515
High Highest rank in each indicator
Each city’s score (here 1,112 to 515) is the sum of its rankings across indicators. The city order from
27 to 1 is based on these scores. See maps on pages 16–17 for an overall indicator comparison. Medium
Low
London, and New York also narrowly bunch of jobs in Milan, Paris, London, Beijing, San behind. Yet concentration of wealth reflects
at the top of economic clout between Beijing Francisco, and Stockholm. New York leads the inverse relationship. Among the emerging
and Shanghai, first and fifth, respectively. the world with 16 percent of employment in cities, only Shanghai is expected to reach
healthcare. And a third of Shanghai’s jobs lie productivity per worker (as measured by GDP)
Our first detailed look at current employ- in manufacturing, even as that city is expected on a par with mature cities like London, Tokyo,
ment, population, and production in our 27 to migrate more toward the service sector. Hong Kong, and Singapore.5 The American
cities shows them producing 8 percent of the cities, as well as Paris, Stockholm, Sydney, and
world’s wealth in 2012 despite being home to Looking ahead toward 2025, our baseline Toronto all remain far ahead of emerging ones
only 2.5 percent of its population. Three major scenario estimates that an additional 19 in terms of wealth. Mature cities retain the
job sectors—business and financial services, million will live and 13.7 million work in spending power, and consumer and corporate
wholesale and retail, and manufacturing— our cities. They will generate an additional demand, that drive emerging economies. In
dominate many city economies. The latter two $3.3 trillion gross domestic product (GDP)— fact, mutual self-interest would logically unite
categories are particularly large in emerging all predicated on a world of modest growth. emerging and mature cities as one side
cities. Business and financial services when Population and employment will surge in cities continues to need the other.
grouped together account for over a third like Beijing, Shanghai, Mumbai, Istanbul, and
5 Abu Dhabi, an emerging city, is among the overall wealth leaders.
São Paulo, with the pack of mature cities far But that is driven by the oil economy, hence an anomaly for
broad comparison.
Partnership for New York City | Cities of Opportunity | 11
14. Yet visions of the future, like all plans put logical connection. In that case, employment Cities of Opportunity also ventures beyond
on paper, are made to be altered by the would rise by 8 million versus the 2025 the 27 cities in our study to examine cities
unforeseen. We questioned what might baseline projection. at the edge of change. First, we look at
occur if the urban world takes different turns those emerging giants, the megacities with
• If the industrial/information revolution
based on the relative importance of either staggering growth and an equally impressive
moves in the direction in which it
city characteristics (as represented by our 10 challenge to develop infrastructure and quality
shows signs of going and technological
indicator categories) or the direction of the of life at anything near the same speed. The
unemployment kicks into higher gear, all
world economy. In looking ahead, we focused population numbers are impressive, of course.
cities suffer losses in jobs and production—
on understanding the possible journeys rather But the direction is more so. In 1950, seven
which are especially painful set against a
than the final destinations to provide leaders of the 10 largest metropolitan areas were
background of sluggish economic growth
in government, business, and the community in the developed world. By 2010, only New
coupled with booming urban populations.
a pragmatic gauge for their thinking. York and Tokyo remained on the list along
Emerging cities do worst in all sectors, with
with eight developing megacities. European
Beijing, Shanghai, and São Paulo losing
“What if” scenarios (see pages 32-38) show that: cities had vanished. By 2025, according to
2.4 million, 1.9 million, and 1.3 million jobs,
• If cities succeed based on knowledge, the United Nations, the number of megacities
respectively, versus the baseline 2025 projec-
technology, and travel connections, the (with population over 10 million) will have
tion (see chart on page 35). But London
mature cities—notably London but also nearly doubled to 29 from 16 at the turn of
and Tokyo also each lose approximately
Paris, New York, and Tokyo—benefit the the century, with 12 of the 13 new ones in the
1.1 million jobs.
most. This is a logical connection in an inter- emerging world. (See page 79, “Megacities,
• If protectionism spreads as a way to coun- megachallenges.”)
twined urban world: It’s easy to picture the
ter lingering slow growth, all cities will lose
cities that prosper as those with the deepest, Anyone who has lived in a big city for long,
jobs and production, with Beijing, Shanghai,
broadest, and highest-quality education; however, knows that things rarely remain the
São Paulo, London, and Tokyo again suf-
those that are “wired” most thoroughly and same for more than a few years. For better
fering the worst. In fact, the World Trade
effectively for businesses and individuals; or worse, change happens.
Organization and European Commission
and those with infrastructures offering easi-
indicate that restrictive trade policies are on Athens, Dublin, and Dubai are three cities
est access to, from, and for the rest of the
the upswing now as nations seek to put their that dramatically illustrate the toll of the
world. All these elements are often viewed
own houses in order at the expense of the Great Recession and the differing paths to
as leading indicators of urban potential.
outside world. recovery. We wondered what lessons might
However, the higher productivity that would
likely accompany this reality also depresses • If quality of life drives city economies emerge by comparing them. It turns out that
overall job numbers. The results brighten as businesses and professionals flock to each city followed its own path into the crisis,
notably, though, if 3 percent greater world the most livable cities, London, Sydney, managed its own way, and dug out or sank in
trade accompanies this scenario, another Singapore, and Paris benefit the most. deeper in its own way. Therein lies “a tale of
three cities” (see page 88).
Mature cities benefit if future success is based on knowledge,
technology, and travel connections or strong quality of life. All cities
suffer if technological unemployment or protectionism takes hold
in a sluggish economy.
The Queen Sofia National Center
of Art Museum in Madrid.
12 | Cities of Opportunity | PwC
15. Interviews track the big themes of urban life: • Peter Chamley digs deep into the practical vast majority of Indians,” Murthy counsels,
the balance required between collaboration challenges of keeping a mature city up “we need to enhance our governance
and competition; the need for visionary lead- to speed from his hands-on perspective as system, enhance our transparency and
ers to drive critical transformation; the quest chief engineer for Arup Group at London’s accountability, combat corruption, and
to build a virtuous circle of economic, social, Crossrail project, New York’s Second Avenue enhance our infrastructure.”
and environmental sustainability; the practical Subway, and many other groundbreaking In the end, many implications arise from
test of how to meet funding needs; and, the infrastructure initiatives. Cities of Opportunity 2012 for city
foundation of any city, safeguarding justice in governments, businesses, and citizens.
• David Miller, World Bank special advisor
the community based on shared respect for law Our goal remains helping to identify what
on urban issues and former Toronto
and order and quality of life. We spoke with: works for cities, framing thought and action
mayor, speaks of Toronto’s ability to
• E.O. Wilson, the renowned scientist, sweeten life for many on the cold shores for leaders charged with public and private
naturalist, and author, addresses the of Lake Ontario with a recipe that beats decision-making, and, by doing so, bettering
potential of cities, good and bad, as they hot Tim Horton’s coffee and maple sugar the lives of the 3.6 billion or so politai, urban
work through humankind’s defining chal- donuts, fashioning success from a founda- citizens representing over half the world’s
lenge of getting the mix right between tion of economic balance, civility, and social population today.
individual and collective interest. “What we cohesion. Miller also addresses the practical-
have to do,” he argues, “is make cities a lot ities of city governance in the face of limited If there is a lesson to be drawn from the study,
more livable. By that I mean, more consis- power and funding. it is the continuing demonstration that cities
tent with the fundamental emotional needs, face similar challenges and opportunities,
• Andrew Chan, Hong Kong-based deputy and their intertwined economies depend on
the instinctive needs of human beings.”
chairman of Arup, dreams of “creating each other to prosper. Coordinated dialogue
• Wim Elfrink, Cisco’s chief globalization a true eco city [with] infrastructure that and action around shared goals remain
officer, frames the transformative possibili- works together in a holistic way so that the most effective order of the day in a
ties of technology backed up by practical energy, water, transport, and waste are all challenging time.
approaches to enable progress, such as public- integrated.” He also tells of some of the big-
private partnerships and business consortiums. gest urban infrastructure challenges in Asia.
Learn more
• Bill Bratton, who spearheaded major • Finally, N.R. Narayana Murthy, founder
crime reductions in New York and Los of Infosys and as much a father of India’s See www.pwc.com/cities for interactive modelers;
Angeles, tells how that is done—street economic miracle as any business leader, videos, podcasts, and full-length versions of the
by street with respect for citizens’ basic takes a clear-eyed look at the challenges interviews; detailed data definitions and sources.
quality of life, attention to law and order, and opportunities that face a nation
and ultimate trust that city dwellers are the urbanizing at the rate of 20,000 new city
ones who will step up to safeguard their dwellers a day. “To bring prosperity to the
own communities.
16. Approach
While the cities and variables may change,
the research method remains consistent
It should be clear by now, in this fifth edition reexamine our methodology every year, and
of Cities of Opportunity, that our annual report why we try to frame our data within a context
is a continually evolving project, in which that illuminates the meaning behind the
the only constant is the assurance that both raw numbers.
its data and criteria are as tested and unim-
peachable as possible, and that sufficient Last year, for example, we explored underly-
thoughtfulness is invested to make it useful to ing issues such as regional management,
cities, their leaders, businesses, and citizens education, cityscapes, sustainability, traffic
seeking to improve their economies and congestion, and preservation. This year, we
quality of life. No new report is the same as are taking an enormous leap forward by
that of the previous year simply because every projecting our 27 cities 13 years into the
new report is subject to careful scrutiny and future, for indicative forecasts, under several
continuing improvement. scenarios, of the global urban outlook in 2025.
But we also continue to focus on the pres-
An entirely new future-oriented section, The ent: “A tale of three cities” reports on Athens,
city tomorrow, is the biggest change readers Dubai, and Dublin, all of which have been
will notice this year. We built from a founda- deeply affected—each in its own way—
tion of Cities of Opportunity methodology and by the consequences of the Great Recession.
results, complemented by Oxford Economics’s
regional and world models, to develop a 2025 The fundamental criteria governing this
baseline projection customized for our 27 report’s choices of cities remain unchanging,
cities. From that 2025 baseline, we con- however. They are:
structed a “what if” scenario modeling tool
sensitive to changes in particular city char- Capital market centers. While many of the
acteristics as represented by our 10 indicator cities included are hubs of commerce, com-
categories or the world macroeconomic munications, and culture, all are the financial
picture. In other words, the modeling tool centers of their respective regions. This means
can reslice the Cities of Opportunity urban pie that each plays an important role not only
according to the relative importance of city locally but also as a vital part of a global eco-
traits that we measure, or it can make the nomic network.
economic pie itself bigger or smaller depend-
Broad geographic sampling. Beyond each
ing on growth assumptions. Methodology
city’s role as a regional, or even global,
is presented in The city tomorrow section
center of finance and commerce, the 27
(see page 20) along with “what if” scenarios.
cities collectively form a representative
Our foundational study of current perfor- international distribution.
mance reaches 27 cities this year, up from 11
Mature and emerging economies. Fifteen
cities when we began five years ago. But we
mature cities and 12 emerging ones are
don’t think that the quantity of cities covered
included this year, with three new cities added
is the most important aspect of Cities of
and two removed. At 27 cities, the sample size
Opportunity. Rather, it is the quantity and
remains small enough to allow for an analysis
quality of the variables we have added to
that is both deep and broad, but still large—
the study during those years. That is why we
and inclusive—enough to be representative.
14 | Cities of Opportunity | PwC
17. This year’s total of 27 cities is one more than The 60 variables, down from last year’s 66, of socioeconomic advancement. This effect
in last year’s report. More important, we have constituting the 10 indicator groups have might be even more pronounced in developing
replaced two cities with three new ones: changed significantly this year in order to economies and economies with larger rural
Buenos Aires, Kuala Lumpur, and Milan. develop an even more accurate image of populations. Nonetheless, because consistent
city success. Indeed, only two indicators— comparisons across all cities are critical to
Italy’s financial (and fashion) center was technology readiness and health, safety assure objectivity, country-level data were
added to enhance the geographic weight of and security—remain unchanged from used when consistent, highly reliable sources
Europe’s southern tier, to counterbalance the previous year. of publicly available municipal data could not
the continent’s northern cities. Kuala be used for all 27 cities.
Lumpur joins this year’s report because it is, The most extensive revisions are in transpor-
by general consensus, one of Asia’s most tation and infrastructure, which has seen its The scoring methodology was developed to
dynamic capitals and increasingly a major focus sharpened from nine to six variables ensure transparency and simplicity for read-
global city. Buenos Aires replaces Santiago (of which only three remain the same); ers, as well as comparability across cities. The
in the Spanish-speaking Southern Cone not demographics and livability, which has been output makes for a robust set of results and a
only because of its economic growth but of its realigned around four variables with the strong foundation for analysis and discussion.
cultural vitality and influence as well. Finally, emphasis on livability; and cost, which has
Houston has been dropped from this year’s four new variables. But there are substantive In attempting to score cities based on rela-
report in order to more evenly balance the changes among other indicators as well, tive performance, we decided at the outset
US with the rest of the world. including sustainability and the natural of our process that maximum transparency
environment, economic clout, and ease of and simplicity required that we avoid overly
We have also revised our indicators, drop- doing business. complicated weightings of our 60 variables.
ping one and adding an entirely new one: city Consequently, each one is treated with equal
gateway. In general, the indicators are con- Because Cities of Opportunity is based on importance and, thus, weighted equally. This
structed with a robust sampling of variables, publicly available information supported approach makes the study easy to understand
each of which has been chosen because it is: by extensive research, three main sources and use by business leaders, academics,
relevant; consistent across the sample; are used to collect the relevant data: policymakers, and laypersons alike.
publicly available and collectible; current;
free of skewing from local nuances; and Global multilateral development Taking the data for each individual variable,
truly reflective of a city’s quality or power. organizations such as the World Bank and the 27 cities are sorted from the best perform-
(See pages 92-95 for a brief key and International Monetary Fund, national ing to the worst. The cities are then assigned
www.pwc.com/cities for a detailed listing statistics organizations, such as UK National a score from 27 (best performing) to 1 (worst
of definitions and sources.) Statistics and the US Census Bureau, and performing). In the case of a tie, the cities are
commercial data providers. The data were assigned the same score.
Data this year were normalized for factors collected during the latter half of 2011 and
such as relative geography or population in first quarter of 2012. In the majority of cases, Once all 60 variables are ranked and scored,
almost all cases, minimizing the likelihood the figures used in the study refer to 2010 they are placed into their 10 indicators
of a city doing well solely because of size or and 2011 data. (for example, ease of doing business or city
historic strength. This process eliminated the gateway). Within each group, the variable
need to differentiate between variables that In some cases, national data are used as a scores are then summed to produce an overall
reflect a city’s raw power (such as number proxy for city data. Use of national data tends score for that indicator. This produces 10
of foreign embassies or greenfield projects) to disadvantage the 27 cities in our study, indicator league tables that display the relative
and the quality or intensity of a given all of which are either national or regional performance of our 27 cities.
characteristic (such as percent of population capitals of finance and business that tend to
with higher education). outperform national averages in measures
Partnership for New York City | Cities of Opportunity | 15