Urbanisation
- More people now live in towns and cities than in rural areas
- Urbanisation varies across the globe and is the increase in the percentage of a population living in urban areas
- Urban settlements differ from rural ones in terms of:
- Way of life: faster-paced
- Size: larger
- Density of buildings and people: compact and high
- Economy and employment: finance, service, and manufacturing
- HICs show the highest levels of urbanisation, with the lowest levels in Africa and Southeast Asia
- The world population doubled between 1950 and 2015, but the urban population more than trebled due to:
- The decline of industry in developed countries, as the industry moved overseas to emerging countries (cheaper workforce, incentives, tax breaks, etc)
- This led to industrial growth in emerging countries and 'pulled' people from rural regions to urban areas, with the hope of a better life and employment
- High rates of urbanisation occur in LICs because:
- Most new economic development is concentrated in the big cities
- Push-pull factors lead to high rates of rural-to-urban migration
- Cities are experiencing higher levels of natural increase
Urbanisation pathway
- The differences between HICs and LICs can be shown in a pathway over time
- Countries become more urban as they develop economically
- As they move through the stages, the pace begins to slow and begins to flatten out or decline as counter-urbanisation gains speed
A diagram to show the urbanisation pathway
Urbanisation pathway