1 / 16

Chapter 8: Urbanization & Rural-Urban Migration

Chapter 8: Urbanization & Rural-Urban Migration. Urbanization and Development. Economic development causes urbanization There is a positive correlation with economic development and urban population growth. Urbanization Across Time and Income. The LDCs experience rapid urban population

yardan
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 8: Urbanization & Rural-Urban Migration

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 8: Urbanization & Rural-Urban Migration

  2. Urbanization and Development • Economic development causes urbanization • There is a positive correlation with economic development and urban population growth

  3. Urbanization Across Time and Income

  4. The LDCs experience rapid urban population growth because of Natural increase: birth rate > death rate Rural-urban migration: movement of rural workers to urban areas Urbanization

  5. Contribution of R-U Migration • On average, about 50% of urban population growth is due to R-U migration • Rapid R-U migration has resulted in the construction of slumps and shanty towns that house a large percentage of urban population

  6. Dualistic Economic Structure • Formal sector: organized and regulated economic system (e.g., government agencies,banks); it generates 2/3 of GDP • Informal sector: fragmented and unregulated economic system (e.g., street vendors, loan sharks); it generates 1/3 of GDP

  7. Dualistic Labor Market • Formal labor market: urban & rural: skilled labor (e.g., government employees, teachers) with education and license • Informal labor market: urban & rural: semi-skilled and unskilled labor (e.g., small business, street vendors)

  8. Urban Informal Sector • Most rural migrants find jobs in the “informal” urban labor markets • The “informal” urban labor force is a large component of the urban labor force

  9. A Model of R-U Migration • Urban “informal” sector hires labor from • Urban “informal” markets (e.g., shop keepers) • Rural “formal” markets (e.g., tractor drivers) • Rural “informal” markets (e.g., farm workers) • Urban “formal” sector hires labor from • Urban “formal” markets (e.g., teachers) • Urban “informal” markets (e.g., drivers)

  10. R-U Labor Movement Formal: Urban Sector Formal: Rural Sector Informal: Rural Sector Informal: Urban Sector

  11. Todaro’s R-U Migration Model • Factors affecting migration decision • Expected urban income • Probability of finding an urban job • Cost of living in urban areas • Decision criterion: • Migration will take place if the “expected” benefits exceed the costs (in present value)

  12. Todaro’s Framework of Migration Decision

  13. Todaro’s R-U Migration Model Benefits from migration: • Difference between “expected” urban income and rural income (R-U wage differential) • Psychic benefits Costs of migration: • Transportation cost • Opportunity cost of being unemployed • Difference in living expenses • Psychic costs

  14. Todaro’s R-U Migration Model Non-economic factors inducing migration: • Distance • City lights: movie theaters, restaurants, etc. • Relative living in urban areas helping reduce living expenses • Information flow about job openings in the “informal” sector

  15. Policies Inducing R-U Migration • Neglect of agriculture • Urban bias development strategies • Job creation in urban areas • Educational opportunities: R-U brain drain • Urban wage subsidies

  16. Policies Reducing R-U Migration • Eradicate poverty and reduce population growth • Promote rural and agricultural development • Expand small-scale, labor-intensive industries • Eliminate factor-price distortions and adopt “appropriate” production technologies • Modify direct link between education and employment

More Related