
Syllabus: GS1/ Urbanization and its challenges
Context
- India’s next Census in 2027 is set to retain the 2011 definition of “urban,” as announced by the Registrar General of India.
How India Defines Urban Areas?
- In the 2011 Census, an urban unit was defined as either a statutory town or a census town.
- Statutory Towns: Notified by State governments; governed by urban local bodies (municipal corporations, councils, nagar panchayats).
- Census Towns: Remain administratively rural, but they function like urban areas. It satisfies the following criteria;
- A minimum population of at least 5,000.
- At least 75% of the male main working population engaged in non- agricultural activities
- Density of 400 persons per sq. km or more.
Limitations of the Current Definition
- Binary Framework: Settlements are classified only as “urban” or “rural,” ignoring peri-urban and transitional areas.
- Governance Gap: Census towns function like cities but remain under Panchayati Raj institutions, which lack the financial autonomy of urban local bodies.
- In India, urban local bodies are more autonomous and have more freedom and control over their finances, while Panchayati Raj institutions are limited to implementing centrally designed welfare schemes.
- Outdated Criteria:
- The 75% male workforce rule ignores women’s unpaid and informal work.
- Semi-urban residents often juggle both farm and non-farm jobs, blurring the rural–urban divide.
- Mismatch with Ground Realities: Many villages have urban lifestyles and dense populations yet remain administratively rural.
Implications of Misclassification
- The outdated urban definition leads to a significant underestimation of India’s urban population.
- While the official 2011 Census reported that 31% of India’s population lived in urban areas, research using alternative density-based criteria (Population & Environment, 2019) suggests that the actual urban population could have been, ranging between 35% and 57%.
- Policy Blind Spots: Settlements excluded from the “urban” category receive fewer resources for housing, transport, sanitation, and social infrastructure.
- Planning Deficit: Peri-urban areas become the informal urban clusters with no proper governance, resulting in unplanned sprawl.
- Labour Market Distortions: Growth of service sector and gig economy in smaller towns remains unacknowledged in official classifications.
Way Ahead
- Broaden Criteria: Move beyond rigid population size and male workforce benchmarks to include:
- Population density and contiguity.
- Occupational diversity (beyond agriculture vs non-agriculture).
- Functional linkages with nearby urban centres.
- Periodic Review: Regularly update classification criteria to reflect changing economic and demographic realities.
- Governance Reform: Gradual municipalisation of census towns to provide them with elected bodies and urban-level services.
- Gender-Sensitive Measures: Recognise women’s unpaid and informal work in defining occupational structures.
- Global Learning: Adopt multi-dimensional definitions like those used by OECD or UN-Habitat, which consider density, built-up area, and commuting patterns.
| Global Perspective of Urbanization – There is no universally accepted definition of urban. – DEGURBA Method: To address this, six international organizations – the European Union, FAO, ILO, OECD, UN-Habitat, and the World Bank – jointly developed the Degree of Urbanization (DEGURBA) method. 1. Endorsed by the UN Statistical Commission in March 2020, this harmonized approach allows international and regional comparisons of urbanization. – DEGURBA Classification System: Uses population density and size on a 1 km² grid to classify the entire territory of a country into three broad categories and seven sub-categories: 1. Urban Centre, 2. Urban Cluster: subdivided into dense, semi-dense, and suburban/peri-urban cells, 3. Rural Areas: subdivided into rural clusters, low-density rural grids, and very low-density rural grids. |
Source: TH
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