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2015/10/181 3. City population trends In general there is a concern that continued fast urbanisation in the post-apartheid period will overwhelm the capacity.

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Presentation on theme: "2015/10/181 3. City population trends In general there is a concern that continued fast urbanisation in the post-apartheid period will overwhelm the capacity."— Presentation transcript:

1 2015/10/181 3. City population trends In general there is a concern that continued fast urbanisation in the post-apartheid period will overwhelm the capacity of cities to accommodate all residents What are the real settlement dynamics and their likely impact? Key issues examined in the report: Growth trends in nine SACN cities and secondary cities Rural-urban migration and reverse migration City to city migration Intra-city movements of people International migration Other demographic shifts, notably from HIV/AIDS Scenarios and implications

2 2015/10/182 3. City population trends Between 1996-2001 SA’s pop grew 10,44% (or 2,01% / yr) Between 1996-2001 9 cities grew 14,82% (or 2,80% / yr) But this picture of ‘faster big city growth’ must be nuanced 9 CITIESSASA - 9 CITIES 1946 pop2 894 7107 369 7094 474 999 2001 pop16 581 77244 819 77828 238 006 1946-20013.22%3.34%3.41% 1946-19603.56%5.69%6.83% 1960-19703.31%3.14%3.06% 1970-19802.71%1.39%0.77% 1980-19912.13%1.96%1.88% Adjust 91-96 (4.54%)(5.54%)(5.96%) 1996-20012.80%2.01%1.55% SA cities growth slower than national pop growth over 55 years Slower than in the 1960s And slower than in the 1991-96 period

3 2015/10/183 3. City population trends Not all the 9 cities are growing at the same pace According to census data 3 groups … Fast growth cities growing at btwn 3,4% - 4,1% per annum Stable growth cities growing at btwn 2,3% - 2,4% per annum Slow growth cities growing at btwn 0,6% - 1,3% per annum So 4 SACN cities grew at a rate slower than population growth outside 21 largest cities in SA – a rate of only 1,4% per annum

4 2015/10/184 3. City population trends 96-01 population growth in specific cities Ekurhuleni4,12% Joburg4,10% Tshwane3,37% Cape Town2,45% eThekwini2,35% Mangaung1,35% Msunduzi1,18% Nelson Mandela0,73% Buffalo City0,53% SACN cities2,80%

5 2015/10/185 3. City population trends But fast growth SACN cities are not growing nearly as fast as some hyper-growth secondary cities And slow growth cities are not seeing depopulation as in some secondary cities Mogle CPolokwneRustenbrguMhlathze 223657424976311326196183 289724508277395540289190 29.54%19.60%27.05%47.41%28.25% 5.31%3.64%4.90%8.07%5.10% JoburgEkurhulenTshwaneCape Town 2639110202680716827012563612 3225812248027619859832893247 22.23%22.37%18.02%12.86%18.77% 4.10%4.12%3.37%2.45%3.50%

6 2015/10/186 3. City population trends Migration is the main reason for differences in city growth Large proportion of SA population ‘on the move’. But the dynamics are not easy to read: Massive rural to rural migration ‘Permanent’ in-migration to urban areas balanced by returns to rural areas later in life. Under-urbanisation? ‘Circular migration’ as strong as ever Rural to urban migrants are getting younger (especially 15-19 year olds) City to city migration is increasing Foreign in-migration increasing, especially asylum seekers

7 2015/10/187 3. City population trends Some cities are seeing as many people moving out as moving in, and large outmigration to other SACN cities

8 2015/10/188 3. City population trends SA cities are in the middle of a demographic transition, which is seeing move to smaller, nuclear households, decline in fertility, etc Hard to read the impact of HIV/AIDS within this, especially with roll-out of ARVs Are we already seeing: An accellerated decline in fertility? Above normal rate of popu- lation decline in 20-39 yr olds? Urban to rural return migration, especially among women, as they ‘go home to die’?

9 2015/10/189 3. City population trends In the intersection of these forces three likely scenarios 1.Continued very fast growth of a core of cities, hand in hand with very slow growth in others as people leave these centres – Gauteng polycentric urban region equivalent in size to some of world’s largest “megacities”? 2.All cities drop back to a stable growth path. Some slightly faster or slower 3.All cities dragged back to a weak growth path under impact of under- urbanisation and HIV/AIDS, with depopulation in some GLOBAL MEGACITIES IN 2015 (Population in m) 1. Tokyo27,2 2. Dhaka22,8 3. Mumbai22,6 4. Sao Paolo21,2 5. Delhi20,9 6. Mexico City20,4 7. New York17,9 8. Jakarta17,3 9. Kolkata16,7 10. Karachi16,2 11. Lagos16,0 12. Los Angeles14,5 13. Shanghai13,6 14. Buenos Aires13,2 15. Metro Manilla12,6 16. Beijing11,7 Gauteng poly- centric urban region Pop 14,6 m ?


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