
More people in the world today live in cities and towns
than in the countryside.
And they keep coming an increasing flow of people is moving from farm
to town, from village to city, from town to metropolis. Many end up living
in slums like Sanjay Gandhi Nagar, with few sanitary facilities and little
money.
They find work in the burgeoning informal sector as snack-sellers, construction
workers and domestic servants.
Life is hard, but not as hard as it was back in the villages.
And people will continue to move unless there is a reason for them to stay;
a way to make a living off the land.
Downtown
By the year 2000 China and India will between them have over 700 million urban
inhabitants; more than all of Africa and all of North America. And while India
still remains overwhelmingly rural more than 70 per cent numerically,
it has the largest urban population in the world.
Percentage
of population urbanized2

| Millions and multitudes 1 The average size of the worlds largest 100 cities has grown from 200,000 in 1800 to 5.1 million in 1990. Asia contains three-fifths of the worlds population and 44.5 per cent of the worlds urban population. It also contains many of the worlds fastest-growing cities. None of these are in the North. Some, like London and Chicago, have negative or zero growth. |
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City size
In 1950 almost all the worlds largest cities were in the North; today
almost all are in the South.
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Poor relations
More people are poor in the countryside than in the cities; they also have
fewer facilities. In countries with low human development, 78%
of urban dwellers have access to safe water while only 64% of rural people
do; 64% in cities have access to sanitation but only 20% in villages.
Percentage
of urban and rural people living in poverty in 19902

Bright lights
People leave their villages for a variety of reasons; they are pulled by the
city and pushed by the countryside. They end up replacing one kind of poverty
for another.
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1. An Urbanizing World: Global Report
on Human Settlements 1996 UN Centre for Human Settlements (Habitat)
2. Human Development Report 1996
3. States of Disarray (UNRISD)









