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Sorry New Yorkers, London is the REAL Capital of the World--STM Meetup will be THERE! (15)


11-07-2014 07:52 AM #1 cmdeal (Veteran Member)
Sorry New Yorkers, London is the REAL Capital of the World--STM Meetup will be THERE!

Sorry, New York, But London Is Actually The World's Real Capital City (and the STM Meetup will be THERE!)
From http://www.businessinsider.com/sorry...#ixzz3IN1ITvty

It's an endless debate, and a matter of great pride in both cities. Which of the world's two most financialised, globalisation-cheering megacities can reasonably be described as the world's capital?



One hundred and fifty years ago, the answer was indisputably London. Fifty years ago, the answer was indisputably New York. Now? It's London, not New York, that deserves the crown.


It's One Of The World's Financial Capitals

In terms of stock exchanges, calling London the world's financial capital looks ludicrous. The London Stock Exchange isn't even the second-largest stock exchange in the world after the New York Stock Exchange. It's the fourth (after the NASDAQ and Tokyo).

But this is totally unfair to London: the volume of equities trading done on the London Stock Exchange doesn’t capture at all equities trading done in any one place, just the ones local to that economy. So of course London’s stock exchange is smaller than New York’s: the UK’s economy is much smaller than the US’s. But we’re comparing the cities here, not the countries.

So it's good to look at a more international measure of finance: currency markets. In terms of foreign exchange market turnover, the UK isn’t just the leader, it's still gaining ground, according to the Bank of International Settlements. In 1998, 32.6% of the world’s forex trading was done in the UK (almost all of which takes place in London), against 18.3% in the US. By 2013, the UK had grown to make up 40.9% of the global market, seeing a daily average of $2.73 trillion in turnover. Every day.


Everyone Wants To Work In London

When the Boston Consulting Group polled more than 200,000 people in 189 countries, London trounced the rest of the world when it came to where they would move to work. Unprompted, 16% of respondents said they’d move to the city, well clear of New York’s 12.2%.



That’s not entirely surprising when you look at London’s demographic makeup. Three million of London’s eight million inhabitants were born outside of the UK. In fact, the non-UK born population makes up 105% of the city's population growth between the 2001 and 2011 census. (Why 105%? Because native Brits left, causing negative growth, and the immigrants more than eclipsed that.)

What’s more, the eurozone’s dismal growth prospects and eye-watering youth unemployment rates mean this trend likely isn’t going to slow any time soon.

There have been major increases in the number of people moving to the UK from the rest of Europe. In 2007-08, 15,400 Italians registered to work in the UK, a figure that was up to 44,110 by 2013. Europe’s young workforce is increasingly migrating to the UK (where they don’t need visas to live and work), and a huge number find their way to London. One of the most well-educated generations in history is streaming to London to live and work, and that's an enormous benefit to the city.


And Everyone Wants To Live Here Too

London reigns at the top of Knight Frank’s global wealth report in 2014. Endless anecdotes in the reports show exactly where the world's wealthiest people want to own homes, and the British capital comes out ahead of New York.

The cost of buying and renting is something that makes Londoners want to weep: but it's a side effect of the city's incredible success.

In 2012-13, 49% of buyers in London's prime central market were not British, illustrating the huge demand from abroad. And they're not just buying to hold property as an investment: only 28% of buyers live outside the UK, showing that a huge number of international buyers want to live in the city.


It's The Capital Of Digital Media

London-based media organizations dramatically outperform in Comscore’s English-language ratings.

The two biggest English-language newspaper websites in the world are London-based British organisations. The Daily Mail’s "Mail Online" and The Guardian's website have broken into first and second place, according to ComScore’s traffic figures. That's even accounting for the fact that New-York-based newspapers have a far bigger native American audience than London-based newspapers can find in the UK.



A Deloitte survey puts London not only as the world's leader of highly skilled workers in media (particularly digital media), but as one of the areas where it's extending a lead over the others. Check out the chart above. The report suggests that although US cities take the lead in terms of film and TV, the London is way out ahead in terms of digital media.


And The Capital of Culture

According to Japan’s Institute for Urban Strategies, London takes a commanding lead over New York on cultural grounds (along with every other major city). That’s based on a blend of how trend-setting the city is, cultural resources, and facilities for visitors.

Part of this is down to a history that New York simply can’t match: in the 19th century, it became only the second city since the fall of the Roman empire to reach a population of over one million. Attractions like Westminster Hall (the great hall of the UK’s parliament) are almost twice as old as European colonization in the Americas, and four times older than the USA as a country.



London has four UN world heritage sites, against New York’s one.

It's not just British culture that's on offer. In GfK's survey of more than 5,000 people who visited some of the world's biggest cities, London ranks highest when visitors are asked whether they can "find people who appreciate my culture and with whom I could easily fit in."


So sorry, New York. Sorry Seoul, sorry Paris, sorry Shanghai, sorry Singapore, Sorry Hong Kong. For now, London is the world's global capital.


11-07-2014 08:17 AM #2 flicker (AMC Alumnus)

So will this be the STMers in March? ...

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11-07-2014 08:28 AM #3 Mr Green (Administrator)

Quote Originally Posted by flicker View Post
So will this be the STMers in March? ...

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I feel like these guys are going to get a hard time if STMers track them down.


11-07-2014 09:49 AM #4 hiro99 (Member)

lies, damn lies and statistics


11-07-2014 09:53 AM #5 nt2000 (Member)

Yes house prices make us weep, people don't want to look at you on the tube and the weather is crap most of the time but I wouldn't want to live anywhere else. The melting pot of so many different cultures is fantastic and maybe something we take for granted as it's not replicated in the rest of the country hence the recent rise of UKIP.

Anyone that was around during the olympics would've witnessed London on overdrive.


11-07-2014 02:57 PM #6 twoninetytwo (Member)

I've been there several times over the years and love the city. One of my favorites.

As a history buff it's particularly hard not to love it. Traditional pumped ale is hard to argue with too.

I'll leave it to you guys to argue which is the true capital city though, yikes!


11-07-2014 03:22 PM #7 nt2000 (Member)

I dare anyone to use a night bus for 15mins on a Friday night and witness the "interesting" range of folk London has to offer.


11-07-2014 08:42 PM #8 stackman (Administrator)

Quote Originally Posted by nt2000 View Post
I dare anyone to use a night bus for 15mins on a Friday night and witness the "interesting" range of folk London has to offer.
Dare accepted!

I've dealt with every type of crazy the world has to offer. London has nothing on drunken Fijians


11-07-2014 09:41 PM #9 nt2000 (Member)

Fair point but can you plan it after any stm talk you're doing. .. Just in case.


11-08-2014 12:05 AM #10 maynzie (Moderator)

Makes me more excited, just watched a documentary on it fast becoming the finance capital of the world and the roaring price of real estate

London Comethhh!!


11-08-2014 10:32 PM #11 stackman (Administrator)

Quote Originally Posted by nt2000 View Post
Fair point but can you plan it after any stm talk you're doing. .. Just in case.
haha deal


03-06-2015 08:23 PM #12 cmdeal (Veteran Member)

Quote Originally Posted by maynzie View Post
Makes me more excited, just watched a documentary on it fast becoming the finance capital of the world and the roaring price of real estate
London definitely is not cheap, but it is one of THE great cities in the world.

As Samuel Johnson once quipped, "When a man is tired of London ... he is tired of life."


03-06-2015 10:26 PM #13 phil2014 (AMC Alumnus)

On and off, London has been my home since 1985, when I moved there fresh from college to find work in the creative industries.

Certainly, a lot has changed.

Truth is, the majority of people living in London can't really afford to live there any more, let alone buy anywhere.
Slowly but surely, the 'ordinary' folks have been pushed further and further away from the center and end up commuting on very crowded trains, tubes and buses (not pleasant).
Rental prices are way out of reach of most wages, for a start.
Most Londoners have to spend roughly 2/3rds of their wages on rent.

Flat sharing has become increasingly popular as a result. Although most of us hope to have stopped doing that by the age of 30.

Last year, I finally decided to move to Athens, where the cost of living isn't dramatically lower than it is in London - but my rent has moved from roughly £1500 per month for a small, unremarkable one bed flat in SW London, to EU 200 (@£165) per month for a small but nice one bed within view of the sea... (3 min walk).

I guess I'm fortunate as I work as a freelance copywriter and can continue to do my thang, charging the same rates as I was in London, but suddenly find myself rather better off both financially and in quality of life.

That said, nothing compares to London's fantastic social and cultural scene; but as I recently discovered, AirBNB is a pretty good compromise!


03-06-2015 10:47 PM #14 cmdeal (Veteran Member)

Quote Originally Posted by phil2014 View Post
my rent has moved from roughly £1500 per month for a small, unremarkable one bed flat in SW London, to EU 200 (@£165) per month for a small but nice one bed within view of the sea... (3 min walk).!
Wow. Just wow.


03-07-2015 02:20 PM #15 faridkhan (Member)

I dont care what you say about London, the food and weather still sucks over there. New York is the capital of the galaxy

KK


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