Rapid Urbanization - Bane or Boon?
Rapid Urbanization - Bane or Boon?
By
Dr Arvind Kumar
Currently,
the largest population shift in human history is taking place in different
parts of globe. Every month, there are 5 million new city dwellers created
through migration or birth in Africa, Asia and the Middle East. China alone has
an estimated 200 million "floating" citizens with one foot in a
village and the other in a city. If current trends continue as expected,
between 2000 and 2030, the urban population of Asia and Africa will double,
adding as many city dwellers in one generation as these continents have
accumulated during their entire histories. Between now and 2050, the world's
cities will add another 3.1 billion people. This will be matched by an almost
as dramatic decline in rural population. The United Nations Population Division
predicts that the population of the world's villages and rural areas will stop
growing around eight years from now and that, by 2050; the rural population
will have fallen by 600 million due to migration to cities and urban
encroachment on villages.
This
shift from rural areas to cities makes itself felt in the rough-and-tumble
transitional neighborhoods where rural migrants first land, both in their own
countries and in places like the United States, where they are make up the
largest group of immigrants. There is a need to pay attention to these
neighborhoods, and to the huge demographic shift that is shaping them. These
neighborhoods are eager to succeed and they can be the birthplace of a new
middle class. But they can also spiral into violent failure and threaten entire
countries when barriers are placed in the way of migrants' natural inclination
to succeed.
#bane #boon #Urbanization #Natural #Inclination #Dramatic #Demographic #Villages #Africa #Asia
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