The Free Press Journal

Urban inequality a growing risk in Asia, says World Bank

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Widening inequality in Asia's teeming cities could lead to potentiall­y risky social divisions, the World Bank warned Tuesday, urging government­s to do more to help the urban poor. Half of the region's population live in cities and rapid urbanisati­on has helped lift 655 million people out of poverty, the bank said in a new report. But East Asia and the Pacific are still home to the world's

biggest population of slum dwellers at 250 million, sizeable portions of them found in China, Indonesia and the Philippine­s, the bank said. While studies on inequality often focus on the disparity between urban and rural

areas, the expanding chasm among city dwellers was a major problem, it said.

Victoria Kwakwa, the bank's vice president for the region, said a growing number of people who move to cities lack access to basic services, housing and jobs, which was creating growing resentment over the gulf between urban rich and poor. "Widening inequaliti­es can create social divisions in society and it's much more stark in cities because you have the wealthy living right next door too often to the urban poor in small spaces," said Judy Baker, the bank's urban specialist and the report's lead author.

"We've seen in other parts of the world that this can create some unrest," she told AFP. The bank urged government­s to craft policies targeted at connecting the urban poor with job markets, ensuring quality and affordable housing and access to services such as public transport. In the Mongolian capital Ulan Bator, low-income commuters can spend as much as 36 per cent of their monthly expenses on bus fare because of inefficien­t public transport, the bank said. In Indonesia, 27 per cent of the urban population do not have access to sanitation.

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