What are some of the consequences of over urbanization?

Urbanization is a double-edged sword. Experts are finding successfully reaping the benefits of urbanization while minimizing its major drawbacks may lie in the reconsideration of several aspects.

It will fall upon the city government to prepare and plan for a rapidly growing population. Planting trees, conserving energy and resources, and educating the public can make for a more efficient city.

Better Resource & City Planning

Newly urbanized cities can take note from smart cities, and the technology they use to power their city in response to urban activity. Future-ready technology can solve many congestion issues facing urban populations by facilitating a more efficient transportation ecosystem. To reduce traffic congestion and pollution further, cities will have to consider technology that provides parking solutions to reduce the number of cars driving around on the roads. 

Cities can work with hospitals, businesses, and hotels (all traffic-heavy enterprises) to create an efficient answer to parking and traffic issues. City planners also have to consider either controlling their population growth or expanding their city – and how to economically prepare and adapt for these changes.

Improved Mobility Solutions

Starting with smarter parking management, cities can start to design improved mobility solutions that include micromobility options like eScooters plus future-ready options like both DC fast and standard EV charging can ultimately make urban areas and cities more livable for a wider range of residents.

With the foundation of a smart, cloud-based parking system, cities can start layering on these services based on the insights delivered by an AI-powered intelligence system.

Automation Improvements in Public Transportation

By automating transportation and parking services, you free up human resources to focus on other aspects of managing urbanization. Electric, autonomous busses, trains, and street cars are becoming popular solutions for smart cities that want a brighter, more sustainable future.

Transit needs to be connected and mobile, too. Consumers look for everything from groceries to parking spaces online. When they are deciding whether to call a shared ride or hop on the bus, consumers also need to be able to see their full range of options.

Create Opportunities

To combat unemployment and crime, urbanized cities must create more job opportunities to accommodate their citizens. It will be essential for urbanized cities to foster job growth and creation by working with new technologies, creating new and innovative companies within its city, and considering new global markets.

Whether the process of urbanization is harnessed and managed, or allowed to fuel growing divides, will largely determine the future of inequality, says UN DESA’s World Social Report 2020. For the first time in history, more people now live in urban than in rural areas. And over the next three decades, global population growth is expected to take place almost exclusively in the world’s cities and towns. The total number of people living in cities is expected to grow from approximately 4.4 billion today to 6.7 billion in 2050.

Like some other megatrends, urbanization has the potential to become a positive transformative force for every aspect of sustainable development, including the reduction of inequality. When properly planned and managed, urbanization can reduce poverty and inequality by improving employment opportunities and quality of life, including through better education and health. But when poorly planned, urbanization can lead to congestion, higher crime rates, pollution, increased levels of inequality and social exclusion.

Inequality within cities has economic, spatial and social dimensions. Economically, inequality is generally greater in urban than in rural areas: the Gini coefficient of income inequality is higher in urban areas than in rural areas in 36 out of 42 countries with data.

Larger cities are generally richer but more unequal than smaller cities. The opportunities that cities bring are unevenly distributed in space, preventing entire neighbourhoods and groups of population from accessing proper health care, good schools, sanitation, piped water, employment opportunities and adequate housing among others. Slums are the most notable extreme of the spatial concentration of urban poverty and disadvantage.

The uncontrolled growth of many cities has resulted in inadequate provision of public services and a failure to guarantee a minimum quality of life for all urban residents. The current speed of urbanization in developing countries makes urban governance and adequate planning increasingly urgent. As cities grow, inequality is likely to increase unless we implement policies to address it.

While there is no one-size-fits-all solution to reducing urban inequality, some Governments have been able to address the spatial, economic and social aspects of the urban divide and promote inclusive urbanization, including in rapidly growing cities. Their successful strategies have four elements in common. First, they have established land and property rights, paying particular attention to security of tenure for people living in poverty.

Second, they have improved the availability of affordable housing, infrastructure and basic services and access to these services, since good transport networks, including between residential and commercial areas, are key to spatial connectivity and economic inclusion.

Third, they have facilitated access to education and decent employment for all urban residents.

Fourth, they have introduced mechanisms to allow participation in decision‑making,encouraging input from all stakeholders on the allocation of public funds and on the formulation, monitoring and evaluation of all policies.

For more information on the links between urbanization and inequality, please see Chapter 4 of the World Social Report 2020: Inequality in a rapidly changing world.

What are the consequences of urbanization?

But when poorly planned, urbanization can lead to congestion, higher crime rates, pollution, increased levels of inequality and social exclusion. Inequality within cities has economic, spatial and social dimensions.

What are 5 negative effects of urbanization?

Negative effects of urbanisation:.
Population increase causes housing problems..
Overcrowding..
Unemployment..
Development of Slums..
Water and Sanitation Problems..
Poor Health and Spread of Diseases..
Traffic Congestion..
Urban Crime..

What are the causes and consequences of urbanization?

Urbanisation occurs mainly because people move from rural areas to urban areas and it results in growth in the size of the urban population and the extent of urban areas. These changes in population lead to other changes in land use, economic activity and culture.

What are two negative effects of urbanization?

The Negative Effects of Urbanization are: Overcrowding results in the development of slums. Waste disposal problem. Poor air and water quality with insufficient water availability.