|
|
|
Enabling cities as drivers of economic growth
|
|
|
|
Top Stories |
|
|
|
|
Amit Kapoor | 06 Aug, 2019
Economic development always comes with a dash of urbanization. That is
almost an economic truism. Empirical studies have shown that nearly all
countries that have attained middle-income status were urbanized by at
least 50 per cent, and all high-income countries were at 70 to 80 per
cent level of urbanization. The causal factor is the people that are
attracted towards cities as urban areas are hubs of activity and growth.
The concentration of talent in urban areas drives productivity and
spurs job creation and growth. This explains the strong linkage between
urbanisation and growth of economies as a whole. The view
that cities are the epicentre of economic growth are supported by the
fact that with only 50 per cent of the world population, cities generate
more than 80 per cent of the global Gross Domestic Product (GDP). As a
result, the composition of cities is such that they are home to a
greater number of young and working-age population relative to rural
areas, which makes these regions critical for capturing the demographic
dividend. Thus, cities in the developing world should be the focus of
growth strategy due to their economic size, population composition, and
innovative edge. So, the path to higher growth for an economy
like India should be through its urban areas. It must be noted, however,
that India has had a curious trend in urbanisation. As per the 2011
Census, 31 per cent of India was urbanised. This is projected to be at
34 per cent by the World Bank currently. By contrast, about 55 per cent
of the world has urbanised on an average. Indian urbanisation trends
have been slow with an annual growth rate of 2.76 per cent between 2001
and 2011. In fact, the rate of urbanisation in the first decade of the
new millennium has been slower than most of the second half of the
previous century when urbanisation grew in excess of 3 per cent annually
until the 1990s. These figures show that India is not
urbanising at a growing pace as is often argued. Also, in what the World
Bank has termed "messy", the physical space occupied by Indian cities
is growing much faster than the population growth in these areas.
Satellite analysis of night lights in South Asian cities shows that
urban areas are expanding at the rate that was slightly more than 5 per
cent annually while the population growth in them has been a little less
than 2.5 per cent per year. This curious trend can be a reflection of
the growth of slums and sprawl in the periphery of cities. Thus, it can
be argued that urbanisation in India and the manner in which it is
taking place has immense scope for improvement. On the other
hand, as more and more Indians migrate to urban areas with aspirations
of a better quality of life and opportunities, it becomes increasingly
challenging to meet those demands. Growing urbanisation brings with it a
severe stress on the city infrastructure, basic services, housing, land
use and environment. The inability to meet these challenges constrains
the potential of cities to gain from the agglomeration economies as
productivity is severely hampered. A range of policy issues need to be
addressed to remedy these regional issues facing India as they can
unlock immense growth potential for the country. First, at times
there is little clarity on the responsible body of governance for urban
areas. The Census differentiates between statutory towns and census
towns. While the latter are governed by municipalities, census towns,
which are areas that have a minimum population of 5,000, at least
three-fourths of its male population engaged in non-agricultural
activities, and have a population density of at least 400 per square
kilometre, are classified as urban areas but are considered rural for
all other matters, especially governance. This results in a chaotic
development of urbanisation. India had almost 4,000 census towns as of
2011. Second, India still lacks devolution of power to local
areas despite having decades of constitutional ability to do so. The
74th Constitutional Amendment of 1992 gave the state governments power
to transfer a set of 18 municipal functions to urban local governments
as they have greater knowledge of service delivery at the local level.
However, most of the states have refrained from devolving all of these
powers to local governments. Town planning, for instance, still rests
with a lot of states. It is problematic for urban local bodies to be
accountable to the people but not having the power to deliver services
to them. Finally, to add to the constraints of local
governments, the introduction of GST has limited their source of fiscal
revenue as taxes like octroi and local body tax were subsumed within it.
This imposed a heavy strain on the functioning of local bodies as they
had relied heavily on revenue from these sources. The GST revenue, thus,
should have been shared with local bodies as well. This has not been
done; severely limiting the ability of urban local bodies to implement
development plans and provide services. India needs to address these
issues facing its urban economies to access the full potential that they
present for being drivers of economic growth.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Customs Exchange Rates |
Currency |
Import |
Export |
US Dollar
|
84.35
|
82.60 |
UK Pound
|
106.35
|
102.90 |
Euro
|
92.50
|
89.35 |
Japanese
Yen |
55.05 |
53.40 |
As on 12 Oct, 2024 |
|
|
Daily Poll |
|
|
Will the new MSME credit assessment model simplify financing? |
|
|
|
|
|
Commented Stories |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|