According to an index of 306 cities published by the Council for Community and Economic Research (C2ER) released last week, the cost of living in the borough of Manhattan in New York City is 128 percent higher than the national average, with an index score of 228.
The council has published the quarterly data since 1968, after it was originally published by the government, and uses the prices of 60 consumer goods and services in six categories: grocery items, housing, utilities, transportation, health care and miscellaneous items.
Housing, which is weighted the heaviest in the analysis, created challenges for the data collection with its plummeting prices across the country.
"This is the worst economy the project has seen since 1968," said Dean Frutiger, project manager of the Cost of Living Index project at C2ER.
Frutiger said the project usually does not use new home prices below $165,000 for its data collection, but he has been seeing "prices that are far below that."
"The economy forces us to be pretty flexible," he said.
Here's a list of the nine cities with the highest cost of living out of the 306 regions analyzed by C2ER.
1. Manhattan (New York), New York - Index Score: 228.3 |
Getty Images/Vetta |
Frutiger said C2ER usually looks at homes with four or more bedrooms at about 2,400 square feet.
"In Texas, that's a closet, but that's going to be huge in Manhattan," he said.
For that reason, C2ER will have to pro-rate housing data from New York to compare to the other cities in the index.
Getty Images/AWL Images RM
2. Brooklyn (New York), New York - Index Score: 181.3 |
Getty Images/AWL Images RM |
New York boroughs make it to the top of the list frequently, Frutiger said.
"I don't think anyone would be surprised looking at that," he said.
3. San Francisco, California - Index Score: 166.5 |
4. Honolulu, Hawaii - Index Score: 165.8
Getty Images/Flickr RF |
5. San Jose, California - Index Score: 154.3 |
Getty Images/Flickr RF |
6. Stamford, Connecticut - Index Score: 147.4
A suburb of New York, Stamford has a cost of living 47.4 percent higher than the national average. Though finance professionals have been known to escape to Stamford for lower costs and more real estate space, the index indicates utilities costs are higher in Stamford than in Manhattan or Brooklyn.
Getty Images/Flickr RM |
7. Queens (New York), New York - Index Score: 145.9 |
Getty Images/Flickr RF |
Encompassing the metropolitan area of Santa Ana, Anaheim and Irvine, Orange County's housing costs were higher than in Queens, New York. However, its utilities and healthcare costs were lower than those of Queens. Lacking an efficient public transit system, Orange County had transportation costs higher than those of Queens, San Francisco and San Jose.
9. Washington, D.C./Arlington/Alexandria, Virginia - Index Score 144.6
In previous years, Washington D.C. was not on the top ten list, but has become one of the most expensive cities in recent years, Frutiger said.
Getty Images/Vetta |
Housing costs in Washington, D.C. were higher than in Orange County, but were lower than in the other cities of the top nine.
Source: http://abcnews.go.com
No comments:
Post a Comment