On May 23, 2007, the world reached a
seemingly invisible but momentous milestone. For the first time in
history the world's urban population outnumbered the rural one. Now
more than half its human population, 3.3 billion is living in urban
areas. By 2030, this is expected to swell to almost 5 billion. Many of
the new urbanites will be poor. Their future, the future of our cities
and the future of humanity itself, all depends very much on decisions
made now in preparation for this growth.
Towns and town creation play an important role to impose control over
the country. It also directs the activities of urban residents towards
the larger purpose of establishing an administrative network and helps
attain national prosperity. Unfortunately powerful political and
economic interests shape urban policies to line their own pockets. The
middle and working classes pay the bills for humongous, perpetually
undelivered projects and programs.
There is an ominous divide between the urban and rural economy. Incomes
in the cities have greatly increased for some whereas rural residents,
who make up a huge section of the population, have barely felt the
effect. This economic differential leads to large scale resentment and
a sense of deprivation. The widening divide in turn drives millions
into the cities, creating slums filled with poor, dislocated people. To
slow down this stampede, we have to bring jobs to the countryside.
Investors should be encouraged to build factories away from the
presently focused main cities and help boost the local cottage industry.
The course of sustainable development at the local and regional levels
requires the pursuit of economic policies that do not add new burdens
to the carrying capacity of our locale. Population shifts or migrations
to urban areas globally have traditionally been a tell-tale sign of
many issues. Here people move for assumed advantages, such as
employment, educational and economic opportunities. There is also
forced movement to flee environmental crises, persecution and violence
at the hands of the feudal.
In Pakistan what is happening today is the migration of farmers,
peasants and landless rural families to cities that do not have
sufficient means to absorb the newcomers productively. The result has
been an explosive growth of slums with hungry miserable people without
access to even the basic necessities of life. Here these souls discover
their utopia to be a concrete jungle with sprawling slums, massive
traffic jams, chronic unemployment, no education/health care, almost no
electrical/water services, less recreational facilities and
sky-rocketing food costs.
This urban nightmare is almost impossible to escape as it ensnarls
millions. People migrate, more are born into it through no fault of
their own; to live and die in it. They are unable to escape its grip,
thanks to the numerous barriers purposefully placed by the oblivious
system. With this urban explosion, the feeble obsolete infrastructure
crumbles further, with the housing situation aggravating with each
passing day.
Our bourgeoning population growth at almost 3 percent and strong inward
migration (rural to urban) trends add to the woes. This is also
compounded by the decreasing average household size in our urban
centers. This translates into more houses for a smaller number of
people. For a population of 160 million there are nearly 19 million
houses countrywide against a required 26 million. This leaves a
staggering shortfall of nearly 7 million houses.
The number is huge if seen against the backdrop of housing units being
built annually. The bulk of existing 19 million houses consist of 67
percent rural houses, while kuccha and semi pukka houses account for
about 40 percent of total housing units. Room density for Pakistan and
India is nearly 3.5 persons per room while it is 1.3, 1.1 and 0.5 in
the case of Turkey, China and USA respectively. At present the urban
housing demand stands at 8 percent per annum.
The rural-urban migration may be a global phenomenon but developing
countries like Pakistan with already over burdened urban cities, seem
reeling under the endless deluge. Karachi, that utopian beacon for all,
is attracting more than 250,000 to 300,000 people annually! This mass
migration adds to the innumerable woes of this city ominously creaking
at the seams.
Migrants inhabit squatter settlements or shanty towns called katchi
abadis. Karachi has 539 katchi abadis and a staggering 49 percent of
the city population lives there. Presently 30,000 housing units, a
fraction of the gigantic demand, are being constructed. Pakistan's
social and human indicators too make for dismal reading. In the context
of development, the government faces a three pronged crises:
wide-spread poverty, fast track unplanned urbanization and rapid
erosion of our natural resource base.
Over two-thirds of our adult population is illiterate. 740,000 child
deaths are reported each year, half of them linked to malnutrition.
This is one of the highest infant mortality rates in the world.
Pakistan is also experiencing one of the fastest rates of urbanization
in the developing world. This will result in the urban population
exceeding the rural by the turn of the century. Our population growth
rate is the highest in South Asia. According to long-term UN
projections, Pakistan will emerge as the third most populous country in
the world by the year 2050.
Already, 36 million people live in absolute poverty. More than half of
the cultivable land in the holdings of 50 acres and above is in the
hands of big landlords, thereby encouraging the rich-poor divide to
further widen. Even after six decades of independence we are
essentially a feudal society. Ultimately, collapse always results in
the 'abandonment' of urban centers, but that abandonment can take many
forms. Sometimes, it means just what the word implies-people move out
of the cities. Other times, it means that everyone crowds into the
cities, hoping to escape the poverty of the countryside, only to die in
an orgy of violence, famine and disease.
A lack of imagination, rather than lack of skills, is a far more
critical distinction between survivors and victims. To learn to make
our cities livable we will have to break some longstanding chronic
habits. The hardest habit to break is the 'syndrome of tragedy', that
brooding feeling, like we are terminal patients in almost all walks of
life. There is absolutely no dearth of 'specialists' out to prove that
change is not possible. What has to be explained to them is that it
takes the same energy to say why something cannot be done as to figure
out how to do it, provided an honest working will is there.
We long for a spiritually satisfying niche, a human habitat that
cooperates with our biological nature, a community rich with
multifarious interactions. Communities are living, growing organisms
that need constant internal regulation and whose health should be based
upon happiness alone. 'No society can surely be flourishing and happy,
of which the far greater part are poor and miserable'. Adam Smith made
that statement back in the 18th century. It holds true for the Pakistan
of today.
Today our struggling cities, like almost everything else, are portrayed
as evolutionary dead ends, with no future to contemplate. Our vision
should be less a dream, an end-point or an unrealizable utopian
existence, out there somewhere in the future; it should instead be an
unending process to promote social justice and economic well-being
among all Pakistanis. We should work towards peace with nature and that
enveloping ecosystem which sustains life on our planet and is the true
source of our natural capital.
It is time to raise our voices in opposition to the degradation of our
lives, the jeopardizing of our individual and collective health and
well being and above all the pollution of our politics. The consumer
culture we inhabit bombards us with messages to buy beyond our budgets
and live beyond our means. We can be more happy and content if we could
but get off the habit of buying too much and consuming thoughtlessly.
Hiding our unhappiness by frolicking in this consumer paradise for
some, we who can, eat too much, spend too much, and waste too much time
on things that do not matter. Along the way, we contribute to the
plunder of nature's depleting capital and the theft of our children's
future.
It is time to construct a future where people and nature matter, where
wealth is based on the things that count rather than merely the things
that can be counted. It is time to find the means for putting our urban
house in order by planting seeds that will establish new roots for our
urban community; enliven and enrich the nourishing soil on which we
depend for human life itself.
http://www.countercurrents.org/aziz060608.htm