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Monday, 6.05.2024
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The latest edition of the Institute of Management Development’s Smart City Index combines hard data and survey responses from citizens in 142 cities worldwide.

The Swiss city of Zurich has retained the top spot for the fifth consecutive edition of the Institute of Management Development’s (IMD) Smart City Index, with Norwegian and Australian capitals, Oslo and Canberra, in second and third places, respectively.

Another Swiss city, Geneva, was fourth and Singapore is ranked fifth.

The index was produced for the second consecutive year in partnership with the Seoul-based World Smart Sustainable Cities Organisation (WeGO), an international association of local governments, smart tech solution providers and institutions.

Assessing quality of life for inhabitants

Researchers combined hard data and survey responses from citizens in 142 cities worldwide (Al Khobar in Saudi Arabia being a new addition) to show how technology is enabling cities to achieve a greater quality of life for their inhabitants.

For the first time since the Index’s creation in 2019, there were no North American cities in the top 20. By contrast, all but three were Asian or European.

The top 20 smart cities are:

  1. Zurich
  2. Oslo
  3. Canberra
  4. Geneva
  5. Singapore
  6. Copenhagen
  7. Lausanne
  8. London
  9. Helsinki
  10. Abu Dhabi
  11. Stockholm
  12. Dubai
  13. Beijing
  14. Hamburg
  15. Prague
  16. Taipei City
  17. Seoul
  18. Amsterdam
  19. Shanghai
  20. Hong Kong.

“Cities must design and adopt strategies that can resist the test of a future plagued with growing uncertainties,” said Bruno Lanvin, president of the Smart City Observatory, part of the IMD World Competitiveness Centre, which carried out the research.

“Trust and good governance are growing in importance, and the significance of AI [artificial intelligence] in city design and management is set to increase.

“Counterintuitive as it may sound, AI can help cities to become more human-centric.”

North American cities have proven to be volatile in their year-on-year positioning. Washington DC and Denver fell by 12 places, and Los Angeles by 11. Meanwhile, San Francisco went down by nine, New York City by seven, and Chicago by four.

Adding to North America’s woes, Ottawa’s three-place fall and Montreal’s nine-spot loss created a setback for Canada, too. The data shows a worsening of infrastructure and safety across North America.

“Last year, most US cities rose in the Index but this year they have fallen,” said Lanvin. “Some explanation can be found in Biden’s Build Back Better, which had a positive effect. In contrast, this year elections are on the horizon, making people more critical about areas that need to be improved.”

Conversley, overall quality of life has played a positive role in an increasing number of European cities.

Zurich, Oslo, Singapore, Abu Dhabi, Beijing, and Seoul are the most consistently high-performing cities in the Top 20 since the Index started in 2019. Sydney, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Tallinn, Riyadh, and Melbourne look likely to enter the top 20 soon, judging by their momentum across recent years.

“The goal of building resilient and adept cities capable of addressing the evolving needs and disruptions in the Fourth Industrial Revolution era can be achieved when cities prioritise and understand inclusive digitalisation as ‘smart investments’,” said WeGO secretary-general Jung Sook Park.

IMD and WeGO’s partnership is soon to result in a third volume of smart cities case studies presented in the book Prosperous and Inclusive Cities, out this spring.

All city profiles can be downloaded here.

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Quelle/Source: Smart Cities World, 12.04.2024

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