close Visitor Edition

The McKinsey Quarterly is the business journal of McKinsey & Company. Register now for immediate access to hundreds of articles.

Subscribe to Premium Membership to read this article

  • Text Size
  • Print
  • Download PDF
  • Link to This

What makes a city a financial hub? Premium

Up-and-coming cities in Asia and Eastern Europe are eager to know how to attract multinational financial-services companies.

AUGUST 2004 • Dominic Barton

Economic Studies, Productivity & Performance Article, headquarters

In This Article

McKinsey asked top executives at 15 leading global financial-services companies what they wanted in a city for their regional headquarters. The subject is of keen interest in Asia, where the dynamism of Shanghai—and of China in general—is calling into question long-standing corporate and civic ties elsewhere. Officials in cities such as Seoul are asking how they could attract regional corporate headquarters. So are officials in Eastern Europe's growing economies, eight of which join the European Union in 2004. How does a corporation choose among Budapest, Prague, and Warsaw? Both economic development and prestige are at stake. A survey identified six important criteria, three of them primary and three secondary.

About the Authors

Dominic Barton is a director in McKinsey's Shanghai office.

...

Premium Membership

Already a Quarterly member? Log in now.
Are you a Firm member or alumnus?

Premium Membership benefits:

  • Access to the entire Quarterly archive, past and present
  • Subscription to the collector’s edition print journal
  • Downloadable PDFs of all articles for offline use
  • Premium Membership FAQs

Start by filling in this form

  • Membership Information
  • Shipping, Billing, & Payment
  • Review & Complete

Country & Membership Term