Poverty in Urban Areas
- Poverty is defined as an individual not having the resources needed to meet a certain standard of living
- In urban areas, poverty often means that people do not have:
- Basic services such as clean water, sanitation and electricity
- Adequate housing
- Access to healthcare and education
- There is wide variation in wealth across urban areas
- In HICs, the poorest areas are usually found in the inner city areas around the CBD
- In contrast, the poorest areas are the squatter settlements usually found at the rural urban fringe
- Poverty and deprivation lead to a variety of problems in urban areas
- All cities have levels of inequality, but LICs are amongst the worst affected
- Many low-income families are 'pulled' to informal settlements around towns and cities, looking for a sense of 'belonging' with others in the same situation
- In other areas without a strong social network or cities with recently arrived large populations, high levels of crime, begging and petty theft are more common
- Overall, this creates urban poverty that degrades both the physical and social environment around that area
- This makes it difficult for people to escape from poverty and they fall victim to the vicious 'cycle of poverty’ and urban poverty becomes ingrained within the city
- Combined with a lack of suitable work, housing, water supply, sewerage, solid waste disposal and pollution, the quality of life for people in cities is low
Cycle of poverty
- Poverty and deprivation are passed on from one generation to the next
- Children will tend to get less parental support and usually have to attend inadequate schools
- They also tend to leave school early with few qualifications
- Lack of qualifications means they cannot find well-paid employment and rely on social handouts
- Children they have will be born into this cycle and so families remain ‘trapped’ and unable to improve their circumstances
- This feeds into a lower quality of life