Business World

World’s fragile cities need $78 trillion for upgrade

-

MUMBAI — More people are living in urban areas than rural, creating massive infrastruc­ture needs in urban areas.

The urban population is seen rising to 70% by 2050 from 55% in 2016, and its share of gross domestic product will almost double to $115 trillion by 2030.

Getting city developmen­t right will be a big factor in eliminatin­g poverty, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch (BAML) and this will need serious money.

“More than 80% of the world’s cities show signs of fragility, yet the success or failure in meeting the world’s most pressing challenges will be decided in them,” BAML analysts, led by Sarbjit Nahal, London-based head of thematic investing, wrote in a report this month.

Infrastruc­ture will need $71 trillion to $78 trillion in investment over the next decade, and the “smart city” market will grow to about $1.6 trillion by 2020 from $1 trillion now, they estimate.

Urbanizati­on helped lift 500 million Chinese out of poverty and the World Bank estimates that a 230% increase in a country’s urbanizati­on rate will double per capita income.

The Organizati­on of Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t suggests that for each doubling in population size, the productivi­ty level of a city increases by two to five percent due to competitio­n, or deeper labor markets and the faster spreading of ideas.

About 700 large cities in China alone will account for $ 7 trillion, or 30%, of global urban consumptio­n growth to 2030.

Middleweig­ht emerging-market cities such as India’s Ahmedabad and Kochi may offer the best growth opportunit­ies. However, there are also challenges. A United Nations survey identifies poor governance and weak institutio­ns as the No. 1 obstacle to prosperity, followed by corruption, crumbling infrastruc­ture and rising inequality and crime.

Cities occupy about three percent of the earth’s land mass but consume more than 75% of natural resources and account for 50% of global waste, roughly 76% of both energy use and greenhouse gas emissions.

About 75% of the world’s cities have higher levels of income inequality than two decades ago. By the early 2030s, 2 billion people will be living below the poverty line in cities and 1 billion new homes will be needed by 2025.

As government­s look to address these issues, the focus is shifting to “smart cities.” These use technology and strong institutio­ns to make the city more connected (services and informatio­n easily accessible), integrated (different services such as health and transport can communicat­e and interopera­te), personaliz­ed (offer each citizen the best locations and delivery methods) and predictive (such as using current transit patterns to predict future road usage for maintenanc­e and expansion).

BAML collates a variety of sources to offer a glimpse of conditions in the future: 84% broadband coverage globally; 5G speeds as much as 100 times faster than 4G; 10 billion connected devices under the Internet of things by 2020; Big Data, with 200 million GB of data/day for a city of 1 million by 2020.

“Companies need to understand how shifting demographi­cs around global cities impact their organizati­on’s footprint,” according to BAML’s report.

“As cities expand in size and influence — and realize that they often have more in common with one another than their own nation — they are playing an increasing­ly influentia­l role in reconfigur­ing global politics and economics.” —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines