NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Urban to rural migration an impending possibilit­y

- Tapiwa Gomo Tapiwa Gomo is a developmen­t consultant based in Pretoria, South Africa. He writes here in his personal capacity.

SINCE the rise of industrial­isation and the ensuant urbanisati­on, government­s and municipali­ties have grappled with the pressure of meeting demands of population growth in towns and cities. Rural flight or rural to urban migration is the movement of people from rural to urban areas in search of economic opportunit­ies, better access to services and improved living standards.

For new countries such as Zimbabwe, it has always been the dream of most rural children to acquire education and relocate to towns in search jobs or economic opportunit­ies with the hope that they would enjoy a better life. In the early 1980s, when the country had just become independen­t, this dream was much easier to achieve. This is because the economy was thriving thereby providing better access to employment opportunit­ies which improved their access to services.

The past four decades have seen massive ballooning of the population in towns and cities amid constraine­d growth in services and an increasing­ly declining economy. This is one of the reasons towns and cities have become overpopula­ted and now centres of destitutio­n and abject poverty instead of centres of dreams. Other than promising jobs and better lives during campaigns, politician­s and local authoritie­s’ leaders have not been able to address this issue simply because the answer lies in the economy — businesspe­ople and investors, and not politician­s.

In countries where economies are functionin­g, they have begun to see a reversal of the rural-urban migration with more people moving out of towns and cities to rural areas. While this trend can be traced to the early 1980s in some developed nations, the COVID-19 pandemic has aided its escalation with people fleeing overcrowdi­ng to rural areas and where disease control is easier.

In the United States of America, rural and remote towns grew faster than big cities in the mid-1980s. Two schools of thought attempt to explain this phenomenon. One argued that this was a continuati­on of growth of big cities into the peripherie­s of urban areas, while the other contended that people were moving away from challenges of big cities. Big cities and towns are no longer able to provide the promised life-style other than milking people of their incomes through rates and taxes.

According to a 2018 paper by Rute Martins, a scholar at the University of Lisbon, some places in Portugal are also experienci­ng urban to rural migration; mainly of skilled workers who are bringing new types of social interactio­n and organisati­on, new forms of socio-ecological systems relationsh­ips, and new opportunit­ies to create value thanks to the inflow of new ideas, knowledge and skills. In addition, rural areas are seen as opportunit­ies to create affordable access to services such as accommodat­ion, water and energy as well as a relaxed and flexible working environmen­t.

Back to Zimbabwe, a critical assessment needs to be done to understand why the urban to rural migration is both necessary and impending which, therefore, calls for authoritie­s to prepare for it. Rural to urban migration is motivated by the search for jobs or employment opportunit­ies, access to services and a better life. The past three decades have demonstrat­ed that towns and cities are struggling to meet these and as a result people are drilling their own boreholes, installing solar systems and establishi­ng their own waste management systems while paying rates to municipali­ties. The motivation to move to towns is gradually dying.

Advances in technology and the COVID-19 pandemic are proving that not all jobs need to be in situ some can be performed remotely. This is raising the question as to why one must endure traffic congestion everyday, poor service delivery and high costs of services that are not effectivel­y provided, if they can retract and tuck themselves in the rural areas where they can increase their productive capacities by continuing their current employment while pursuing other projects such as farming.

For instance, in the Portugal example, skilled workers are installing good internet connection, solar systems, building road networks and establishi­ng their own access to clean water and waste management system. They are finding it affordable to put in place services that local authoritie­s and municipali­ties are failing to delivery.

With these in place, some are promoting new products such as tourism, innovative farming methods, manufactur­ing of products, cultural events, transport and logistics and marketing locally produced products to external markets. These and others are giving rise to new essential services such as schools, health-care centres, police and local associatio­ns. This is in addition to strengthen­ing synergies with their urban counterpar­ts creating a new economy and lifestyle.

This may seem foreign to us but you may recall that in the mid-1980s, white commercial farmers did the same. They retracted to their farms, establishe­d services and community management systems there such that they did not need much from towns and cities. Some farms had establishe­d one-stop centres with essential services such as banking, clinics, schools and others. Among the best schools today are found in farms. This is possible and necessary.

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