The three cities have been improving their scores steadily in business activity, information exchange, human capital and cultural experience - key parameters used to measure a city's global engagement in the index released today, said the London-based global management consulting group.
The three India cities have made particularly strong improvements in information exchange, in part due to gains in the number of broadband subscribers, it said.
"The ability to attract human capital is key to the success of any city. For that it needs to be able to provide a good environment for living as well as innovation," said Debashish Mukherjee, a partner with A T Kearney.
Mukherjee added: "The Indian government's plan to develop 100 smart cities across the country is a step in the right direction. India's major cities should be a priority for the government's smart city program."
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The Global Cities 2015 includes two parts - The Global Cities Index (GCI) and the Global Cities Outlook (GCO).
This is the fifth edition of the GCI, which was launched in 2008.
The GCI provides a unique assessment of global engagement for 125 cities, measuring how globally engaged each city is across 26 metrics in five dimensions - Business Activity, Human Capital, Information Exchange, Cultural Experience, and Political Engagement.
For the GCO, cities in India and China are the ones to watch, especially Ahmedabad, New Delhi and Beijing.
New York and London remain the world's most global cities, as they are the only cities to rank in the top 10 of both GCI and GCO.
San Francisco leads the GCO due to its strength in innovation. Other cities ranking at the top of the GCO include London (#2), Boston (#3), New York (#4), and Zurich (#5).
Beyond New York and London, the Global Elite includes Los Angeles, Chicago, Toronto, San Francisco, Boston, Paris, Brussels, Berlin, Amsterdam, Tokyo, Singapore, Seoul, Sydney and Melbourne.