10 Reasons to Focus on tier II Cities

Cities around the world are increasingly becoming the main drivers of trade, investment and local economic development.  However, not enough attention is being paid to the fastest-growing urban areas of all, and the ones with the greatest potential to shape our urban future: secondary cities.

These cities, ranging in size from between 150,000 and five million, represent one of the biggest opportunities for urbanising economies globally. Some 75 per cent of the world’s population lives in urban settlements of fewer than 500,000 people.

Despite their growing role, countries often ignore the productive role that secondary cities can play in a balanced national system of cities. As a result, many secondary cities are facing numerous development challenges – including creating jobs, attracting investment for needed infrastructure, and diversifying or revitalising their economies – with far fewer options than their larger counterparts.

Another issue centres around migration and the growth of primary cities. In countries around the world, there are tremendous disparities between primary cities and secondary or tertiary cities. Many migrants arrive in secondary cities from their places of origin and then move on to primary cities, making it more difficult to achieve a balanced system of cities.  Why are secondary cities unable to retain more of these migrants? Often, they lack investments and become administrative cities rather than drivers of the economy.

Ten Reasons to Focus on Secondary Cities

1. They are the fastest-growing urban areas. Some 75 per cent of the world’s population lives in urban settlements of fewer than 500,000 people. This number will only increase; secondary cities, especially in African countries, are expected to double or even triple in population over the next 15 to 25 years. This means large infrastructure and service shortfalls, few opportunities for economic growth, and rising urban poverty.

2. There are a lot of them, especially in developing countries.
There are more than 4,000 cities in the world with populations exceeding 100,000. Around 2,400 of these have populations of fewer than 750,000 and more than 60 per cent are located in developing regions and countries. Many are struggling with the problems of rapid urbanisation, poverty and job creation.

3. Many are poor and struggling. The rapid urbanisation of many secondary cities has come at a considerable environmental and social cost. Many secondary cities are poor and overcome by the pressures of development resulting from urbanisation. They often have weak or dysfunctional governance systems; urban development takes place uncontrolled without any consideration of plans, there is little urban infrastructure and provide services, and little attention is given to building and development control. In many cities, slums are growing unchecked.

4. They are the economic backbone of the world’s largest cities. Secondary cities produce less than 40 per cent of world Gross Domestic Product (GDP)but provide most of the resources needed to support the operations and development of the world’s 600 largest cities, which produce 60 per cent of the world GDP.

5. They are governance and economic centres. Most secondary cities are subnational capital cities responsible for the secondary level of government; key manufacturing, primary or resource-industry centre; or a global centre of cultural, natural or advanced-industry significance. They can also be major satellite cities forming a cluster of cities in a metro-region city.

6. They can really boost a national economy. Countries with a strong system of secondary cities – that are not dominated by a single megacity – tend to have lower levels of regional development disparities, higher levels of national productivity, and greater income per capita. An efficient secondary system of cities could double or triple the GDP of many poor cities and rural regions.

7. They come in all shapes and sizes. A secondary city will likely have a population or economy ranging in size between 10 per cent and 50 per cent of a nation’s largest city. In China, some secondary cities have populations of over five million; in Ethiopia, they have fewer than 200,000. Function and role – rather than population size – are increasingly defining a secondary city’s status within the global system of cities.

8. They are often eclipsed by primary cities. Globally, there is a growing gap in levels of socioeconomic development disparities occurring between secondary and primary cities that has a significant consequence on their capacity to develop and compete for trade and investment.

9. We don’t have much information about them. Most reports focus on the study of macro trends or the world’s biggest, most competitive, cities. There is much less information available on the economy, land, finance, infrastructure and governance of secondary cities. This situation is severely affecting their capacity to plan and manage urban development and promote employment and economic growth.

10. Few have the capacity for strategic planning. Much urban planning in secondary cities is geared towards master plans and structure planning. Very few have adopted integrated strategic planning, linking spatial plans to the development of infrastructure, land development, public finance, and long-term financial plans – a vital part of managing city development effectively, ensuring that resources are not wasted, and helping urban systems become much more efficient. Many cities can benefit from the excellent knowledge tools produced by organisations such as UN-Habitat, the Cities Alliance, Inter-American Development Bank and the Asian Development Bank.

Source:

CitiesAlliance

Advertisement

About Rashid Faridi

I am Rashid Aziz Faridi ,Writer, Teacher and a Voracious Reader.
This entry was posted in earth, urban morphology, Urban Studies. Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.