










































|
|
Rudest city
A survey by the Reader's Digest on rudeness among the
cities of the World. Singapore is near the bottom of the list, which to
me is surprising. New York is at the top of the list, which I
believe...don't mind the occassional madman on the street corner talking
to pigeons -- key is to not make eye contact when walking by.
London fails civility test in survey of world cities
The Times June 20, 2006
London fails civility test in survey of world cities
By Alan Hamilton
ENGLISH good manners, did you say? No, they don’t exist. In fact, we’re
as rude as the French, and that’s saying something. They’re more polite
even in Zagreb.
For courtesy these days you have to go to New York, a city once famed
for its intensely irritating “Have a nice day” culture and for the most
ignorant and impatient taxi drivers on the planet.
But, according to a former mayor of the Big Apple, 9/11 changed all
that.
Reader’s Digest magazine sent reporters into the principal city of each
of the 35 countries in which it publishes to conduct a survey of local
politeness. Three tests were employed: dropping papers in a busy street
to see if anyone would help; checking how often shop assistants said
“thank you”; and counting how often someone held a door open.
London and Paris came a disappointing joint 15th, beaten by such cities
as Berlin, Warsaw, Madrid and Prague. New York came top in the survey,
with a score of 80 per cent, compared with 57 per cent for London and
Paris.
Ed Koch, a former mayor of the city, told the magazine: “Since 9/11 New
Yorkers are more caring. They understand the shortness of life.”
The rudest city in the world, according to the survey, is Bombay, which
is even ruder than Bucharest, judged the rudest city in Europe, where
door-holding, paper-picking and thanking the retail customer are not
part of the culture. The Romanians are, the results show, much surlier
than even the French.
Citizens of Zagreb, in Croatia, are the most willing to help you to pick
up a pile of papers; one man insisted on helping despite arthritis and a
bad back. The shop assistants of Stockholm are the most polite,
unfailingly thanking customers for making a purchase.
In São Paulo, Brazil, even the criminals are civil; the researchers were
attempting to buy sunglasses in an illegal market when the police
arrived; the stallholder said “thank you” as he fled.
Moscow, meanwhile, is a very rude place indeed, with a score of only 42
per cent. One woman, refusing to hold a door open, sneered to a Reader’s
Digest researcher: “I’m not a doorman; it’s not my job to hold doors. If
someone gets hurt they should be quicker.”
Courtesy is not big in Asia, either. Every city on that continent
tested, with the exception of Hong Kong, finished in the bottom ten.
None of the three tests scored more than 40 per cent in any Asian city.
Overall, the tests found that the under-40s were the most courteous, and
the over-60s, particularly the men, the least. Some claimed that they
were concerned about patronising modern independent females, and were
particularly unwilling to hold a door open for a woman. Grumpy old men
are clearly not a purely British phenomenon.
Katherine Walker, editor in chief of the Digest’s British edition, said:
“This was the world’s biggest real-life test of common courtesy; our
researchers conducted more than 2,000 separate tests.”
Analysis of all the results suggest that the worldwide level of
politeness stands at 55 per cent. If common courtesy is the oil that
keeps society running, Reader’s Digest concludes, some cities could do
with a top-up.
ROLL OF HONOUR
1 New York (80 per cent)
2 Zurich (77)
3 Toronto (70)
4= Berlin (68)
4= São Paulo (68)
4= Zagreb (68)
7= Auckland (67)
7= Warsaw (67)
9 Mexico City (65)
10 Stockholm (63)
11= Budapest (60)
11= Madrid (60)
11= Prague (60)
11= Vienna (60)
15= Buenos Aires (57)
15= Johannesburg (57)
15= Lisbon (57)
15= London (57)
15= Paris (57)
20 Amsterdam (52)
21= Helsinki (48)
21= Manila (48)
23= Milan (47)
23= Sydney (47)
25= Bangkok (45)
25= Hong Kong (45)
25= Ljubljana (45)
28= Jakarta (43)
28= Taipei (43)
30= Moscow (42)
30= Singapore (42)
32 Seoul (40)
33 Kuala Lumpur (37)
34 Bucharest (35)
35 Bombay (32)
|