Why to study Urbanisation ?

RavikantJoshi 299 views 27 slides Jul 09, 2021
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About This Presentation

This PPT deliberates on increasing role of urbanisation in the World and India and is affecting our present and future.


Slide Content

Why Study Urbanisation?
DR. RAVIKANTJOSHI
LECTURE DELIVERED TO SCHOLARS OF INDIAN SCHOOL OF PUBLIC POLICY
10
TH
SEPTEMBER, 2020

Unprecedented pace of urbanisation during 20
th
Century is a
turning point in human history -It has changed human geography
beyond recognition
21
st
Century will be a century of cities and urbanisation –make or
break century of human existence

Unprecedented Urbanisation
Widespread all pervading urbanisation is a truly 20
th
century phenomenon
Rome was the first settlement to reach 1mn population
1800 –London become the second city to reach 1 mn
World’s total and urban population growth
◦1800 –only 2 % of World’s Population was urban
◦1900 –15% (250 mn) of World’s Population (1.5-1.7 bn) was urban
◦1950 –30% (715mn) of World’s Population (2.5bn) was urban
◦2000 –46% (2.8bn) of World’s Population (6.1bn) was urban
◦2010 –50% (3.4 bn) of World’s Population (6.8 bn) become urban
Unprecedented pace of urbanisation during 20
th
Century. Turning point in
human history –during 1950-2000 urban population increased by 2.1 bn –same
number will increase during 2000-2030

Post 1900 –unprecedented urbanisation
The historical pattern of urbanisation
suggests that countries tend to urbanise
very slowly until they attain urbanisation
level of around 25 to 30 per cent.
The pace of urban growth between
urbanisation levels of 25 to 30 percent and
55 to 60 per cent is a very short historical
time frame of 25 to 50 years.
European Countries –late 19
th
Century
North America –Early part of 20
th
Century
Latin America –Late part of 20
th
Century
Asia –Early part of 21
st
Century
Africa –Middle part of 21
st
Century

Regional Dynamics of Urbanisation 1950-2000
The fulcrum of urban population shifting away from Europe and NA to developing
countries.
1950-2000 1.5% growth rate of urban population in North America and Europe
Share of Europe and North America in urban population declined from 53% to
27.5% and will go down to 17% by 2030
Latin America now has become predominantly urban and will surpass Europe in
urbanisation level by 2030.
Six out of 10 countries with the largest urban populations are in Asia
At present half of urban population lives in Asia and in 2030 it will have majority of
urban population of the world
In 2030 2.7bn urban population will be in Asia and all other regions will have urban
population of about 2.3bn

Growth of Mega Cities
In 1950 only one city (New
York) with a population over
10mn people
In 2000 there were 17 cities
(10 in Asia)
In 2015 12 out of expected 21
cities with 10mn or more
population will be in Asia and
17 cities by 2020.

Urbanisation Trends (PERCENT URBAN)Region 1950 1970 1990 2000 2020
World 29 37 43 48 58
Developed Countries 55 68 74 76 83
Developing Countries 17 25 35 41 54
Asia 17 23 32 38 51
India 17 20 26 29 41
China 11 17 26 35 51

2008 -World becomes Urban –No more rural

Why Study Urbanisation? –future challenges
2.2bn people will get added to world’s population by 2030
World’s population is growing by 77mn p.a. (1.2 % per annum).
World’s urban population is growing (60mn p.a.) three times of rural
population (17mn p.a.)
By 2030 world’s total population will be 8.35bn while urban
population will be 5 bn that is 60%.of total population
Out of this 4bn (80%) will be staying in today’s developing countries.
World’s population will stabilise by 2050 around 9 to 9.5 bn –out of
that Urban population will be 6 to 6.3 bn (66 %)
World needs urban policy makers/professionals to handle this growth

Why Study Urbanisation ? –for addressing
climate change
By 2050 world will reach 70 per cent level of urbanisation, more than 6 billion people in Cities
Future Urbanisation is going to be a good thing or bad thing ? If we care about the people and
future of humanity then this is the defining question.
In words of Peter Calthrope-architect, urban designer and urban planner
◦While addressing climate change we will be building cities for additional 3 billion of the people
that is doubling urban environment
◦Unless we set right our cities climate change solutions will not be able to save mankind because
cities constitute 70 % of CO
2emissions
◦Not only environmental impact but so much more depends on how we shape our cities –our
social well being, economic vitality, sense of community and connectedness
◦Fundamentally the way we shape cities is the manifestation of the kind of humanity we bring to
bare
◦Getting future of the cities right is at most necessary to get future of the World right
◦Setting Cities right will make Climate Change possible

Why Study Urbanisation? Close relationship
with economic growth
Urbanisation refers to the population shift from rural to urban –a process by which towns and
cities are formed and become larger as more people begin living and working in urban areas.
Urbanisation is not a modern phenomenon –it existed right from the down of civilization, first
cities got formed around 8000 BC. It is a process linked to modernisation, industrialization,
globalization.
Urbanisation relevant to many disciplines –urban planning, geography, sociology, architecture,
economics, public health and now climate change
Urban growth refers to absolute number of people living in urban areas and increase in it
Urbanisation gets promoted by
◦Economies of scale in production –manufacturing –require larger settlements of people
◦The existence of information externalities leading to agglomeration economies.
◦Technology development –building & transportation
◦Substitution of capital for land
◦With the growing importance and role of service industry

Urbanisation & Economic Growth
Urbanisation and economic growth are inevitably
linked, however the impacts from this can be both
negative and positive.
Urbanisation and economic growth are
interdependent and increase in tandem
Urbanisation and poverty levels are well known to be
correlated.
According to the Global Monetary Report, countries
that have 40% or less people living in urban areas
have significantly lower income levels, and higher
poverty rates.
Urbanisation reduces poverty because it creates new
opportunities.

Urbanisation & Economic Growth
Theexistenceofagglomerationeconomiesgiverisetocontinuingaccretionofpeopleina
settlement,thuspromotingcitygrowth.
UrbanisationandCitiesareactingas‘enginesofeconomicgrowth’,‘agentsofchange’,and
‘incubatorsofinnovations’.
Between1960to2000Worldoutputwentupfourfoldwhileurbanpopulationtripled.
UrbanisationNegativeImpact-
Urbanisationhascausedunprecedentedeconomicgrowth,howeverthatgrowthhas
causedhugeinequalities.
Indiahassomeoftheworstinequalityintheworld,withone-fourthofIndia'surban
populationlivinginslums

Increasing urbanisation can propel India’s economic growth..
We are here
Low impact
Visible impact
High Impact
Source : Mario Polese, Pamela Echeverria and Mila Freire, 2002

Why Cities? –for economic prosperity and
now for sustainable world !!
All through organized history, if you wanted prosperity you had to
have cities. Cities are places that attract new people with new ideas.
–Jane Jacobs, author of “Cities and the Wealth of Nations”
All through future time, if you want Sustainable Development and
Sustainable World, you will have to have Sustainable Cities -
Ravikant Joshi
Sustainable cities are critical to reducing greenhouse gas emissions
and meeting the economic and social needs of people worldwide -
Ban Ki Moon –UN General Secretary

Why Study Cities? –it’s a living organism
–a way of life
21
st
Century is going to be a Century of Cities
Future of Cities is going to be Future of all of us, Future of the World and Humanities
A City is not mere a concentration of ‘n’ number of people.
Cities have been a prime phenomenon of human civilization.
50 % of Global GDP is produced by 600 cities
A City gets in one or another manner –a face, an identity
A City is a living organism and like a child its personality need to be shaped, nurtured and
developed.
A city, after all, is only a means to a way of life. More than ever, life happens outside the home,
rather than inside it: a good city can make life happier regardless of a society’s level of economic
development.

Why study Cities ? –for addressing poverty issue
◦World population 6.1 billion (2000) of which 1.0 billion are poor of which
750 million live in urban areas
◦World –Urban population @ 50.0 % of total & slum @ 33% of Urban
◦1.3 billion out of 3.9 billion urban population lives in slums
◦In Developed Countries –75.5 % & 6 %
◦In Developing Countries –40.9 % & 43%
◦In Least Developing Countries –26.2 % & 78.2%
◦Poverty is getting transferred to urban areas –Urbanisation of Poverty

By all accounts, urbanisation will define the
trajectory of Indian development.
Economic Survey of India –2017
“Byallaccounts,sustainablefinancing
strategieswilldefinethetrajectoryof
achievingSustainableCitiesandSustainable
DevelopmentGoalsbyIndia”

Citiesthatareentrustedwithresponsibilities,
empowered with resources,and encumbered
byaccountabilitycanbecomeeffectivevehiclesforunleashing
dynamismsothattocompetitivefederalismIndiacanadd,andrelyon,
competitivesub-federalism-EconomicSurveyofIndia2017
BUT IN REALITY IN INDIA THERE EXISTS CITIES THAT -
•ARE NOT ENTRUSTED WITH RESPONSIBILITIES,
•ARE NOT EMPOWERED WITH RESOURCES,
•AND ARE NOT ENCUMBERED BY ACCOUNTABILITY
•HAVE BECOME INEFFECTIVE/INADEQUATE VEHICLES FOR
UNLEASHING DYNAMISM AND INNOVATIONS TO ACHIEVE
SUSTAINABLE URBAN DEVELOPMENT.

Urbanisation in India trails global average
17.3
18.0
19.9
23.3
25.7
27.8
28.8
33.0
36.1
38.9
42.6
46.4
0.0
5.0
10.0
15.0
20.0
25.0
30.0
35.0
40.0
45.0
50.0
1951 1961 1971 1981 1991 2001
IndiaGlobal Average
% of total population

Urbanisation in India
377.16 million urban population; 31.15 % of total population as per 2011 Census
7933 urban settlements, 4041 Statutory towns
53.12 million below poverty line urban people
Contributes 60 per cent of the GDP
25 percent do not have access to adequate and door step water
19 percent do not have access to latrines
Less than 250 cities have full or partial sewerage system
Only 29 percent capacity for waste water treatment (11000 mldagainst 38000 mldgeneration
Less than 40 percent solid waste get scientifically treated
Absolute housing shortage 0.39 million units, relative housing shortage 18.8 million units

Urbanisation in India
2001 -35 million plus cities, 37.8 % urban population (107.88 million)
2011 –53 million plus cities, 42.6% of urban population,
Eight cities above 5 million population
2001 -393 class I cities hold 68.62 % urban population.
2011 –468 class 1 cities hold 70.24 % urban population
Big cities are becoming bigger
Urbanisation & Economic Growth
◦1950-51 -29 % of GDP
◦1980-81 -47 % of GDP
◦1990-91 -55 % of GDP
◦2001 –60 % of GDP
◦2020 –65 % GDP
Per capita productivity ratio between urban and rural is 7:2
Current spending on urban infrastructure is 1.0 % of GDP
Required & feasible spending is 2.5 % of GDP

Future Urbanisation in India
In 2021 –urban population will be 550 million almost 50 percent of
total population
It will then contribute 75 % to the GDP
There will 75 million plus cities
2031 –87 million plus cities
In top ten cities India will have three cities and in top twenty cities
of the world India will have eight cities.

Vision/ expectations / characterises of
Future Cities
Vision for Future Cities under SDG 11 –Sustainable Cities
◦Inclusive, Safe, Resilient, Sustainable
Other Expectations about Future Cities
◦Basic services for all / Cities for all
◦Fair and equal city -Access to Equal opportunities and face no discrimination
◦Cleaner
◦Connected
◦Affordable
◦Green /Garden City / eco –city
◦Competitive City
◦Smart City

Future of Cities? / Future of Urbanisation?
Even the cities of Developed Countries crumbling, decelerating and the future of Cities of
developing and underdeveloped countries at present appear bleak
So much is needed to be done with the existing cities and so many solutions are offered, as
a result policy and decision makers, implementers of most of the cities are feeling confused
and bogged down and do not know where to start
But there is a hope because more than 80 percent of the cities in developing countries that
will exist in 2065 havenot yet been built. What has yet to be built could be different and
better than all existing cities.
An urban challenge for the next few decades will be to create dense cities which offer
much more of what people seek in the suburbs: everything at walkable distance and walk is
possible, green parks and safe and car-free spaces for children to ride bicycles.

Future of Cities -There is hope….
World has adopted sustainable development goal of ‘sustainable cities’
In Habitat III conference countries have framed new urban agenda and has
adopted it for implementation
New institution UN Urban which will coordinate global approach to urbanisation
is getting set up
Monitoring Systems like ‘Sustainable Cities Index,’ Resilient Cities Report, Cities
of Opportunity Report, City Liveability Index and many more are getting created
Countries and cities mainly of developed countries and few of developing
countries are adopting newer ways of urban planning, design, renewal, service
delivery, resource and energy conservation
25 cities commit to become Emission Neutral by 2050 –C40 Press Release

Why Study Urbanisation?
THANK YOU