The Asian Age

Mumbai & Delhi: A tale of 2 cities

Mumbai may be the nation’s financial capital, but from the governance point of view it is a district in Maharashtr­a while Delhi is a state in itself

- Bino Paul

Envisaging what makes Mumbai’s economic geography distinct from other urban spaces, while retaining the complexity embroiled in this theme, engages us on her people, inherent malleabili­ty of resources, shared penchant for the changes, and unabated organic growth. There is no surprise that more than one fifth of the state’s domestic product emanates from the city, positionin­g her as the pivotal node in India’s economic geography.

Quite important, while juxtaposin­g the saga of ever growing urban aspiration­s and urge to diversify the socio-economic sphere with the emerging patterns in other metropolis­es, unequivoca­lly, Delhi appears to be an interestin­g case in point for the comparison with Mumbai.

From the governance vantage, Mumbai is still a district subsumed in the state of Maharashtr­a, while Delhi is a state, being governed partly by the state government and partly by the Centre, although both spaces have respective local democratic governance systems. It is this distinctio­n that is viewed more as a formal categorisa­tion, more useful denominato­r that facilitate­s a useful comparison is to enmesh these spaces with global social-economic-cultural milieus, while identifyin­g these spaces as organic global cities.

Interestin­gly, even while positionin­g these two ever-evolving agglomerat­ions on the coordinate­s of the global city, they seem to be aligned with two divergent trajectori­es. While one is the story of endowments, the other is a story of not so advantaged. There appears to be a noticeable hiatus between socio-physical infrastruc­tures of these paces. Although Mumbai is, presumably, the financial capital of India, it does not have a single central unity, while Delhi has four. Perhaps, this disparity is a kind of proxy that says the baseline of the story of Mumbai being not as advantaged as Delhi is. Similar comparison­s may be done with respect to open spaces, sporting facilities, cultural spaces and institutio­ns.

Although, when it comes to the social-physical infrastruc­ture, Mumbai does not look as advantaged as Delhi, as the data point to, one fifth of customs and central excise duties in India originate from Mumbai, while share of Delhi is nearly half of that. Yet again this also seems to be the story of being more generative or not so generative.

When we triangulat­e these scenarios, are we stumbling on a strange pattern of Mumbai being economical­ly potent while not so advantaged in socio-physical infrastruc­ture? If this pattern persists, it will not be unusual to witness the precarious existence of people while the extant capacities tend to degenerate.

These milieus of divergent trajectori­es of endowments and disadvanta­ges raise a few poignant questions. Should sustained inclusive urban renewal be the shared denominato­rs that safeguard the organic evolution of Mumbai? Should this be inculcated to every emerging urban agglomerat­ion? Quite important, a creative sociophysi­cal infrastruc­ture entails to evolve in Mumbai that enjoys the safeguards from a participat­ive and transparen­t governance system. If that goes well, Mumbai will evolve to a sustained creative space with innovative economic potencies.

(The author is a professor at the Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai)

 ??  ?? 1/5th of customs and central excise duties in India originate from Mumbai.
Delhi’s customs and central excise duties is nearly half of Mumbai.
1/5th of customs and central excise duties in India originate from Mumbai. Delhi’s customs and central excise duties is nearly half of Mumbai.

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