_Singapore ranks top 10 globally connected city in 2022
Flight data analysed by Ruth Wetters of Knight Frank’s Analytics pinpoints which cities are becoming more – or less – critical as world hubs.
With rolling lockdowns and airport closures, Covid-19 prompted some dramatic shifts in tourist and business activity.
How is world connectivity calculated?
Using data on flight connections to and from the world’s 100 biggest airport hubs, Knight Frank's Analytics team was able to analyse and visualise this shift.
The team took two views to understand this:
- A simple count of connections to other airports.
- An assessment of the quality of these links, i.e. a link to an airport with high onward connections scores higher than an airport with limited connections.
What cities have seen a post-Covid change?
The clearest change is the dramatic weakening of the centrality of Chinese cities. With the data covering a period of zero-Covid rules and lockdowns this is hardly surprising, and when we run this data again later in 2023 the impact of China’s January reopening should become apparent.
Other stories emerging include the relentless rise of Dubai as a global hub, moving from second place in 2020 to joint first with London in 2022.
We thought there might be a Brexit-related story in Frankfurt and Amsterdam’s rise, but this neat assumption was undone by Paris’s slip from fifth to sixth place. Istanbul’s rise points to Turkey’s strategic importance, despite ongoing economic turmoil.
Finally, Singapore’s arrival in our top 10 for 2022 underlines the city-state’s steadily increasing global significance, a trend we pointed to in The Wealth Report 2022.
This article originally appeared in Knight Frank's The Wealth Report 2023 and was written by Liam Bailey.
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