\”Pierre, an expensively attired middle-aged French tourist on his first trip to Toronto strolls into the bar of his 5-star hotel. The elegant hostess smiles, leads him to a table and beckons her prettiest server to take care of him. They talk, flirt a little and she giggles a bit. When he draws her closer and whispers in her ear, she gasps and runs away.
The hostess frowns then sends a more experienced waitress to the gentleman’s table.They talk, flirt a little and giggle a bit. He whispers in her ear and she too screams, “No!” and walks away quickly.
The hostess is surprised … . Rather than alienate a high-powered customer, she asks Lucille, her seen-it-all, heard-it-all bartender, to take his order. They talk, flirt a little and Lucille even giggles a bit. When he whispers in her ear, she screams, “NO WAY, BUDDY!” then smacks him as hard as she can and leaves.
The hostess is now intrigued, having seen nothing like this in all her years working in bars. … Besides, she has to find out what this man wants that makes her girls so angry. … So she goes to Pierre’s table, wishes him a pleasant evening and tells him she’ll personally take care of his needs. … They flirt a little, giggle a bit and talk. Pierre leans forward and whispers in her ear, “Can I pay in Euros?”\”
The Emerging Market Research Institute at Credit Suisse has an intriguing report out on \”Opportunities in an Urbanizing World.\” From the \”Editorial\” at the start:
\”[T]he world\’s population is migrating from rural areas–accounting for 70% of global population in 1950–to cities–accounting for 70% of global population by 2050 based on United Nations projections. In 2009, the percentage of the planet\’s population living in urban areas crossed the 50% threshold and by 2037 cities in developing nations will contain half the world\’s total population. …. \”
Here\’s a figure to illustrate the point. World population is divided into four groups. As recently as the 1990s, more than half all the world population lived in rural areas of developing countries. The projections are that in 25 years, more than half of world population will live in urban areas of developing countries.
The coming urbanization will be almost entirely a developing country phenomenon: \”Looking at population projections in the world\’s 15 largest urban agglomerations in 2025, we note that just two–Tokyo and New York City–are in developed countries. Not a single one of the world\’s 25 fastest projected growing major cities is in a developed country.\” But even within developing countries, a number of countries are already seeing decelerating urbanization, because their levels of urbanization are already 70-90% of the population, and so there isn\’t much more room to urbanize. For example, Malaysia, Mexico, Peru, Colombia, Turkey, Czech Republic, Russia and Hungary all have urbanization rates already above 66%, and Argentina, Brazil, Chile, South Korea and Saudi Arabia all have urbanization rates already over 80%.
But another group of countries, mostly in Asia and Africa, but also including Poland, are seeing accelerating urbanization: South Africa, Morocco, Nigeria, Poland, China, Philippines, Indonesia, Egypt, Thailand, Pakistan, Vietnam, Bangladesh, India, Kenya. As the report points out, this list includes six of the eight largest countries by population in the world, and about 55% of world population.
The report argues: \”Exploring the relationship between per capita economic growth and urbanization, we find that there is a sweet-spot as countries urbanize (in the range of 30%-50% of total population), accompanied by peak per capita GDP growth.\” It offers a discussion of each these countries of accelerating urbanization.
Here, I\’ll just make the overall point that urbanization creates economies and diseconomies. On one side, it concentrates, consumers, workers, and firms in a way that allows a flow of information, goods, and services that feeds specialization, economies of scale, technological development, and economic growth. On the other side, it also concentrates problems of pollution, crime, poor health, poverty, and corruption, and raises needs for physical infrastructure and working institutions. The politics and economics of the future are likely to be hammered out, one issue at a time, for better or worse, in the large cities of developing countries. I discussed some of these broader issues of urbanization in \”The Coming Urban World\” in a post last August 29, 2011.