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Are Cities Concentrating Economic Inequality

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Title: Are Cities Concentrating Economic Inequality


1
Are Cities Concentrating Economic Inequality?
Mercy Horst EC 428- Final Presentation May 4,
2001 Professor Horlacher
No society can surely be flourishing and happy,
of which by far the greater part of the numbers
are poor and miserable. Adam Smith, 1776
2
Traditionally, the largest cities have been in
developed nations. Worldwide, urban populations
are on the rise, especially in the Third World.
3
Rapid growth rates mean that by the year 2015,
cities such as Los Angeles, Seoul, Buenos Aires
and Osaka will no longer be among the worlds 15
largest cities they will be replaced by cities
in the Third World.
4
Urban populations are on the rise throughout the
world. With this, there is a shift in societal
structures. Cities in the developing world are
dealing with different issues from those of the
industrialized world.
  • This presentation will look at urbanization
    trends in
  • The United States
  • Developing Countries

5
Income Inequality in the United States
The number of poor people living in US cities has
been on the rise in recent decades
  • Concentrations of poverty in cities in the United
    States has been going on for a while
  • The number of poor people living in rural areas
    fell to 31 in 1980 and 28 in 1990, by the early
    1990s, 72 of Americas poor lived in urban areas
  • By 1970 56 of Americas poor lived either in
    central cities or in suburbs. However, over the
    next two decades, this number continued to grow
  • The poor were becoming increasingly concentrated
    in urban areas, in particular, the urban core.
    The proportion of poor people who lived in
    central cities was 34 in 1970 by 1980, this had
    grown to 39 and grew again to 43 in 1990. At
    the same time, the percentage of poor living in
    suburbs rose in the 1970s but began to decline in
    the 1980s until it reached 29 in 1990

6
What is causing the rising inequality in the
United States?
  • Computerization of production
  • Manufacturing was first hit by computerization
    during the 1970s and 1980s. Older manufacturing
    plants that once provided thousands of well-paid,
    unionized jobs shifted to a capital intensive
    production process that employed far fewer
    workers, but instead were highly dependent on
    computers and robots
  • Union membership declined along with
    manufacturing. Between 1969-1989 the share of
    non-agricultural workers in unions fell from 29
    to 16 in the private sector, the number reached
    12, a number not seen since the 1920s
  • Services also felt the shock of computerization,
    during the late 1980s and early 1990s, large
    bureaucratic institutions loaded with mid-level,
    white collar workers gave way to reengineered,
    downsized service companies
  • This shift saw the loss of many jobs, especially
    for the middle class which has contributed to the
    income inequality in the United States
  • Globalization of capital and labor markets
  • There is now worldwide competition for funds and
    workers. Capital can now be placed in companies
    and countries that offer higher returns and low
    risks, while labor finds itself hiring where high
    wage workers in developed nations compete
    directly with millions of desperately poor
    workers throughout the developing world
  • As manufacturing productivity increased, plants
    that could not compete either closed their doors
    or relocated to low-wage areas overseas
  • Fragmentation of consumer markets

7
Poverty is Becoming Increasingly Concentrated
Within Cities
8
Poverty within cities is becoming more and more
concentrated
  • In 1970, 45 of central city poor lived in a
    neighborhood that was not poor, and38 lived in
    poor and 17 in a very poor neighborhood.
    However this has increased significantly.
  • By 1990, the percentage of central city poor
    living in non-poor neighborhoods declined to 31.
    People living in poor neighborhoods grew to 41
    and in very poor neighborhoods grew to 28.
  • The likelihood of being poor is increasing for
    central city neighborhoods. As of 1990, more
    than two-thirds of all central city poor lived in
    poor or very poor neighborhoods.
  • In 1990, in the largest cities in the United
    States, the average poor citizen was living in a
    neighborhood where approximately one-quarter of
    the neighborhood was also poor

9
The Poor are becoming increasingly concentrated
in poor neighborhoods
10
Social Problems Associated with Concentrations of
Inequality
  • Political
  • Racial
  • Crime

11
Political Problems
The separation of the rich and the poor often
leads to a self perpetuating class structure due
to superior services available to the rich.
  • The rich often try to protect themselves from the
    economic burden of the poor through the
    manipulation of laws and district lines. If they
    can create separate governmental and
    administrative districts that encompass
    concentration of poverty, and if they can force
    these poor districts to supply and pay for their
    own services.
  • Due to the concentration of affluence in certain
    suburbs, these areas have high real estate values
    allowing the rich to tax themselves at low rates
    while offering generous municipal services.
  • The concentration of poverty in central cities
    and inner suburbs means that there is a high
    demand for services but not much funding due to
    low property values as a result, higher tax
    rates are needed to support inferior services.
  • This creates a self-perpetuating cycle where city
    taxes are raised to maintain the inferior
    services causing families with money to leave the
    area, causing property values to fall, creating
    the need for more tax increases and additional
    middle-class flight which further exacerbates
    the concentration of poverty
  • The class differential is carried on to the next
    generation directly through the education system

12
Racial Problems
Blacks suffer disproportionately from income
inequality in the US
  • Massey found that a history of discrimination in
    bank and real estate industries, combined with
    the persistence of white racial prejudice, and a
    legacy of racially biased public policies, result
    in blacks continuing to be the most residentially
    segregated group in the US
  • During the 1970s and 1980s, black poverty rose
    for a small set of racially homogenous,
    geographically isolated, densely settled
    neighborhoods that were not only black but poor.
  • 41 of poor blacks in US central cities lived in
    poor neighborhoods, 42 lived in very poor
    neighborhoods these numbers are much higher than
    the rate for whites of 32 and 11 respectively
  • In 1980, the 50 largest metropolitan areas had
    64 of poor blacks residents living in
    neighborhoods with a poverty rate over 20
    compared to just 13 of whites

13
Blacks continue to be the most residentially
segregated of any minority group.
14
Inequality and Crime
Criminal behavior is associated with income
deprivation thus the geographic concentration of
poverty will cause a concentration of criminal
violence in poor neighborhoods
  • One study found that in one neighborhood in
    Philadelphia, for every one-point increase in the
    neighborhood poverty rate raises the major crime
    rate by .8 point
  • Another study of Columbus, Ohio showed that
    moving from a neighborhood where the poverty rate
    is under 20to a neighborhood where it is over
    40 increases the rate of violent crime more than
    threefold, from around 7 per thousand to about 23
    per thousand.
  • It has also been found that many people take on a
    threatening attitude or commit violence
    themselves in order to deter people from being
    violent against them thus creating a
    self-feeding, escalating problem

15
The Gini Coefficient
  • Gini Coeffients are one of the most common ways
    of measuring income inequality
  • Gini coefficients are aggregate inequality
    measures and can vary anywhere from 0 (perfect
    equality) to 1 (perfect inequality)
  • A country with a relatively unequal income
    distribution typically lies between .50 and .70,
    while countries with relatively equitable income
    distributions usually lied between .20 and .35

16
The Era of Rising Inequality
  • The Gini coefficient has been worsening in most
    countries in recent decades
  • In most developed countries, Gini indices grew
    between 1980 and 1990, indicating a worsening of
    income inequality. The exception was in Southern
    Europe where incomes were lower and inequality
    was greater to begin with.

17
Gini coefficients in many developing countries
are around .5, which is a relatively unequal
distribution
18
Urbanization of Developing Countries
  • Cities in Developing countries are growing in
    their share of world population
  • Cities in poor countries now exceed in total
    population the cities of industrialized countries
  • By 2015, their populations will have increased by
    another two billion at which point more than half
    the worlds population, and half the population
    of developing countries will be living in cities
  • In 1950, some 275 million people were living in
    third world cities, 38 of the 724 million total
    urban population
  • According to UN estimates, the worlds population
    had reached 2.6 billion by 1995, with 66 (1.7
    billion) living in metropolitan areas of
    developing countries

19
The majority of growth in urban areas in the
Third World is coming from rural-urban migration.
20
Hong Kong offers a dramatic example of poor
residents living in boats with the contrast of
the skyline of the booming city.
21
Cities in the Developing World are not prepared
to handle the increase in population
  • The cities of the pre-industrial countries are
    not ready to receive this flood of new
    inhabitants.
  • Cities to do not have the resources or
    infrastructure to accommodate the growing
    population
  • A few important problems include insufficient
    housing, piped water, sewerage, public
    transportation, schools, police protection,
    doctors, hospitals, and other necessary amenities
    and defenses of urban life
  • Most cities in the developing world are still
    struggling to accommodate the billion additional
    people who arrived over the past four decades
  • In 1985, the World Bank predicted that the
    provision of water and sanitation to the new
    population for the year 2000 would require the
    investment of 1 trillion dollars very little of
    that capital requirement has been met

Cities, once an engine of growth can no longer
provide enough jobs to contain poverty. (Piel 71)
22
Cities are no longer able to provide for the
increasing population the way they once could.
  • In the past, many of the urban migrants were
    able to find work, an climbed out of poverty into
    the working, middle, or even upper classes.
    However, in the future, poor migrants who arrive
    in the worlds metropolises are likely to stay
    poor
  • Cities have the advantage of offering
    cost-reductions due to economies of scale, as
    well as access to social services as well as job
    opportunities, and social infrastructure.
    However, the social costs of the increasing
    overload of housing and social services, in
    addition to increased crime, pollution, and
    congestion, tend gradually to outweigh these
    historical urban advantages
  • Former world Bank president Robert McNamara
    expressed concern over this situation These
    sizes are such that any economies of location are
    dwarfed by costs of congestion. The rapid
    population growth that has produced them will
    have far outpaced the growth of human and
    physical infrastructure need for even moderately
    efficient economic life and orderly political and
    social relationships.
  • With this rapid spread of urbanization and the
    urban bias in development strategies has come the
    enormous growth of huge slums and shantytowns

23
Shantytowns as a Growing Reality
  • These shantytowns have appeared in almost every
    city of the developing countries, from the
    favelas of Rio de Janeiro and the pueblos jovenes
    of Lima to the bustees of Calcutta and the
    bidonvilles of Dakar
  • These makeshift communities are growing
    incredibly rapidly doubling in size every 5 to
    10 years
  • Urban slums now make up over one-third of the
    urban population in all developing countries in
    some cases they account for over 60 of the total
    population
  • Most of the incoming population are forced into
    these settlements during the late 1980s, 72 out
    of every 100 new households established in urban
    areas of developing countries were located in
    shanties and slums in Africa that number was 92
    out of 100
  • Because shelters do not meet city specifications,
    and are therefore illegal, and therefore ignored
  • Shantytowns are increasingly hard to move out of
    30-70 of the first billion newcomers still live
    in the shelters they build and improved upon
  • By 2015 at least another 1 billion will make
    their homes in such settlements at which point
    at least 3/8s of the worlds population will be
    living in crowded density in misery and squalor

24
(No Transcript)
25
Shantytowns
Sanitation problems
  • In older settlements in Latin America, where
    population is 70 urban, 30 of households lack
    piped water and sanitation
  • 50 of cities in Asia lacked those amenities and
    in Africa, where the cities are smaller but the
    fastest growing, 70 lacked amenities
  • For the most part, the supply of water to
    shantytowns is unsanitary and intermittent
    Because of a lack of sanitation, Shantytown
    dwellers must live with their own excrement
  • People living in shantytowns, especially the
    children are often infected and infested with
    more than one virus, bacteria, or parasite

26
Shantytowns
Policy Problems Often poor planning or
allocation of space is the cause of these pockets
of poverty in urban areas
  • In metropolitan Cairo, a population of 10 million
    is trying to cope with a water and sanitation
    system built to serve 2 million
  • Misguided government policies regarding urban
    planning often means that 80 or 90 of new urban
    housing is illegal. For example, colonial
    building codes in Nairobi, Kenya make it
    impossible to build an official house for less
    than 3500. The law also requires every dwelling
    to be accessible by car. As a result two-thirds
    or Nairobis land is occupied by 10 of the
    population while 100,000 slum dwellings cannot
    legally be improved. Similarly in Manila,
    Philippines 88 of the population is too poor to
    be able to buy or rent an officially legal
    house
  • Many immigrants find that most land in urban
    areas is already owned by someone else
  • Squatters have seen their makeshift dwellings in
    city after city be dismantled and burned by the
    authorities
  • To avoid loosing their homes, settlers turn to
    places unfit for human habitation, the lowlands
    and even wetlands around the city or hillsides
    too steep for ordinary buildings
  • Settlements have to put up with floods in the
    lowlands and with landslides on the hillsides.
  • An extreme example is in Rio de Janeiro, the roof
    of the lower house often serves as the floor of
    the house above, as may as nine stories can be
    counted up a steep hillside- all subject to
    collapse in a common catastrophe

27
Unemployment
28
Informal Work in Urban Areas
  • The legal labor market of most cities in
    developing countries is unable to absorb the
    growing population looking for work
  • As a result, an informal sector began to emerge
    which has served as a temporary solution to the
    growing unemployment problem
  • First recognized in the early 1970s, this
    unorganized, unregulated, and mostly legal but
    unregistered informal sector helps to employ the
    growing population that does not appear in the
    official sector
  • Most new entrants seemed to create their own
    employment or to work for small-scale family
    owned enterprises
  • The informal laborer tends to be self employed,
    uneducated, unskilled, and lack access to
    financial capital. As a result, worker
    productivity and income tend to be lower in the
    informal sector than in the formal sector

29
The Informal Sector
Evidence indicates that the informal sector plays
a large role in the urban economy of developing
countries.
30
There are both advantages and disadvantages to an
informal labor market
Pros
Cons
  • Due to the low capital intensity, only a fraction
    of the capital needed in the formal sector is
    required to employ a worker in the informal
    sector, offering considerable savings to
    developing countries often plagued by capital
    shortages
  • Provides access to training and apprenticeships
    at lower costs than formal institutions and the
    formal sector, allowing the informal sector to
    play an important role in the formation of human
    capital
  • Increased likelihood to adopt appropriate
    technologies and make use of local resources,
    allowing for a more efficient allocation of
    resources
  • The informal sector plays an important role in
    recycling waste materials, such as the collection
    of goods ranging form scrap metals to cigarette
    butts, which are then used in the industrial
    sector or provide basic commodities for the poor
  • Ensuring an increased distribution of the
    benefits of development to the poor, may of whom
    are concentrated in the informal sector
  • Avoid bureaucratic red tape associated with
    registering new business - delays of up to 240
    days in Ecuador, 310 days in Venezuela, 525 days
    in Guatemala. Brazil, Mexico and Chile all
    require more than 20 applications before a
    company can be approved for business, which not
    only cause excessive delays, but can inflate the
    cost of doing business by up to 70 percent
    annually
  • There is a strong relationship between
    rural-urban migration and labor absorption in the
    informal sector-by promoting the informal sector,
    countries may encourage more people to migrate to
    urban areas in search of work, thus putting more
    pressure on already strained systems
  • Potentially creating further environmental damage
    from a highly concentrated informal sector in the
    urban areas
  • Participants in the informal sector not afforded
    the protection of the formal sector in terms of
    job security, decent working conditions, and
    old-age pensions (though these conditions are
    also often scarce in the formal sector as well)

31
Conclusion
  • Urbanization is creating different problems in
    the United States and the Developing World
  • In both places, it is concentrating inequality
  • This has led to various social problems that need
    to be addressed, because urbanization is
    predicted to continue, especially in the Third
    World
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