Posted on April 05 2012
Despite the financial turmoil of the past few years, New York and London have consistently led the rankings in all three editions of the Global Cities Index. Paris and Tokyo, although they alternate positions this year, are always far above the rest of the top 10, while changes in ranking among cities in the middle section of the GCI are more volatile.This is how the ranking breakdown among all 66 cities. (Click the graph for a larger image) In a comment accompanying the study, Saskia Sassen of Columbia University notes that globalization today is less about relationships among nation states and more about key "urban axes that bring together key cities." She identifies the following "most significant urban vectors" of the coming decade as follows:
Richard Florida 4 Apr 2012 http://www.theatlanticcities.com/jobs-and-economy/2012/04/which-cities-have-most-global-clout/1653/
- Washington, New York, and Chicago. These cities are becoming more important geopolitically than the United States is as a country.
- Beijing, Hong Kong, and Shanghai. Beijing is the center of power, but Hong Kong's geopolitical role is critical; Shanghai is above all the leading national industrial and financial center.
- Berlin and Frankfurt. As an axis, Berlin and Frankfurt time and again emerge as the bulwark for the European Union. If not for the EU, these cities would not be as significant geopolitically.
- Istanbul and Ankara. Istanbul has long been described as the hinge between West and East, with a rich imperial culture and deep knowledge about how to govern such intersections. In combination with Ankara, it is rapidly becoming a major global policy nexus.
- Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, and Brasilia. These cities form the new politico-economic heavyweight axis next to now-established China. Brazil's development bank is richer than the World Bank, and its economic power is large and ascendant.
- Cairo and Beirut. These cities rearticulate what the Middle East means as a region. Beirut has long and well established politico-economic networks worldwide; Cairo has the multitudes and a history of empire.
- Geneva, Vienna, and Nairobi. Finally, a step into what has not yet happened but might arrive sooner than we expect: a global environmental and social agenda rising from the current economic paralysis and financial excess. These cities have the critical mass and mix of institutions long devoted to social questions and justice for the powerless, with Nairobi's habitat increasingly important in a rapidly urbanizing world and a powerful new leadership. All three cities—long overshadowed by global finance and mega-militaries—could emerge as crucial actors in making a global commons, which will be important for the global economy.
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Global Cities Index
World's Most Economically Powerful Cities
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