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OECD Urban Policy Reviews: China 2015

image of OECD Urban Policy Reviews: China 2015

China needs a new model of urbanisation to match the shift to a new model of growth. For decades, both urbanisation and growth have been based on robust export demand, cheap labour, cheap land and artificially low pricing of environmental externalities. None of these can support growth or urban development in the future. This review examines the major challenges associated with the shift to a new model of urbanisation, looking at a range such issues as social and labour-market policies, land use and transport planning, urban planning, urban governance and public finance. The review presents a new assessment of China’s major cities, which defines functional urban areas based on settlement patterns and commuting zones rather than cities defined as administrative units. The results show, among other things, that China has many more mega-cities, with populations above 10 million, than the official data suggest. The good news for China is that the reforms needed to foster what the authorities call “people-centred urbanisation”, while complex, are coherent with one another and supportive of the broader shift to a growth model that relies more on domestic demand and productivity growth.

English

The Chinese urban system and its challenges

This chapter presents an overview of China’s recent urbanisation, looking first at the growth of Chinese cities’ populations and the evolution of the urban hierarchy and then at their economic performance. It considers both the continuing concentration of population in the largest cities and the differences in economic performance observed across different classes of city. This analysis is based in large part on the redefinition of Chinese functional urban areas rather than administrative units. When cities are defined on the basis of settlement patterns and commuting times rather than administrative borders, the picture of China’s urban hierarchy changes substantially. The chapter also examines trends in inequality at different spatial scales, as well as interpersonal inequality, and at the economic structure of Chinese cities. Finally, it explores some of the environmental challenges facing China’s fast-growing cities, particularly with respect to air quality.

English

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