14. Canada: +5.06%. Canada's surging house prices were barely dented by the financial crisis, and have doubled in the past 10 years.
13. Brazil (Sao Paulo): +5.06%. House prices are still rising, despite the fact that country entered recession this year.
12. South Africa: +5.19%. Like Brazil, South Africa's economy contracted in the second quarter, sparking recession fears.
11. Indonesia: +5.24%. Prices in Jakarta, Indonesia's mammoth capital, have more than doubled since the end of the financial crisis.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip Ad10. United States: +5.39%. Not only have US prices risen, since the dollar has too, the price growth is even higher for international buyers.
9. New Zealand: +5.39%. New Zealand was hit by low inflation like much of the rest of the advanced world, but there's plenty of house price inflation.
8. Mexico: +6.38%. Price growth has nearly doubled since this time last year.
7. Japan (Tokyo): +6.54%. House prices in Japan went through more than a decade of decline and stagnation, but the country is making efforts to re-inflate the market.
6. Norway: +6.62%. House prices in Norway have picked up considerably from last year, when they were rising by just 1.4% year-on-year.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip Ad5. Iceland: +7.84%. Iceland is one of the countries that saw a major house price slump during the financial crisis.
4. Philippines (Makati CBD): +7.91%. At least the Philippines is expecting 6% GDP growth this year.
3. Estonia (Tallinn): +8.99%. Estonia makes it to number 3 despite the fact that price growth has halved since last year, when 16% growth was the norm.
2. Ireland: +10.7%. The country that recorded one of the world's biggest housing crashes during the crisis is back in business, and prices are exploding again.
1. Hong Kong: +20.14%. While many other Chinese cities have recorded declining prices recently, Hong Kong tops the world rankings, sending property out of the reach of many local residents.