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Zurich takes top spot in study of expensive places to date

In the city home to both UBS and Credit Suisse, a night-long date cost 147% of what it cost in seventh-ranked New York

Catherine Bosley
Friday 05 May 2017 10:15 BST
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Switzerland's strong currency means local prices seem sky-high for its European neighbours
Switzerland's strong currency means local prices seem sky-high for its European neighbours (Getty)

Nowhere will a night out with a potential life-long love cost you as much as in Zurich. But if the object of your affection likes smokes and booze, you may not want to court in Oslo or Melbourne.

For at least the second year running, Switzerland’s banking hub took the prize for the most expensive city for a date – cab rides, dinner for two at a pub, soft drinks, two movie tickets and a couple of beers – according to Deutsche Bank’s special report “Mapping the World’s Prices 2017”.

In the city home to both UBS and Credit Suisse, the night out cost $195.90 (£151.40) – 147 per cent of the level in seventh-ranked New York.

Deutsche Bank’s Jim Reid and Sukanto Chanda advised Zurich residents to choose their dates carefully, and marry young. It'll be cheaper that way.

The aim of the research is to provide insight into whether or not exchange rates do actually adjust to correct large price differentials across countries and time, as conventional economic theory suggests they should – all else being equal.

Switzerland’s place at the top of the dating list should give investors, and potential romancers, a clue: things are rarely that simple, the country’s strong currency means local prices seem sky-high for its European neighbours.

For dating, Paris, the City of Reasonably-Priced Love, was No 17. Of the 47 places surveyed, the date was least costly in Kuala Lumpur, Jakarta and Manila.

The “Bad Habits Index” of five beers and two packs of cigarettes ranked Norway’s capital first, followed by Melbourne. At $75 dollars in both places, they were 119 per cent more expensive than in Manhattan. Auckland came in third at 104 per cent.

“At the opposite end of the spectrum it’s very cheap to indulge in such habits in the Czech Republic and South Africa,” Deutsche Bank said.

In those two places, the price level relative to New York was just 23 per cent.

Bloomberg

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