In what ways employment be increased in urban areas

  1. In what ways can employment increased in urban areas?
  2. Urbanization, Opportunity, and Development
  3. Urbanization, Opportunity, and Development
  4. In what ways can employment increased in urban areas?
  5. In what ways can employment increased in urban areas?
  6. Urbanization, Opportunity, and Development


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In what ways can employment increased in urban areas?

To increase employment in urban areas, we will need to carry out the following tasks (i) Invest in basic industries which provide mass employment. (ii) Improve local and inter city transportation, so that more people can be employed to work in the transportation industry. (iii) Increase vocational education courses, so that people educated for a vacation get jobs easily. (iv) Give incentives for industry in urban areas to increase their capacity.

Urbanization, Opportunity, and Development

Urban centers now account for more than half of the human population, marking the first time in history that rural population is in the minority. The absolute figures are astonishing: 3.7 billion people now live in cities, and this will double by 2050. Even more dramatic is the extent to which this urbanization is centered in the developing world, where nearly 99 percent of urbanization between now and 2050 will take place. This accelerated shift towards urban life has profound implications for energy consumption, food security, politics, and human progress. While some of this change will be positive, the conditions in a number of fast growing cities highlight the potential for destabilization and dislocation. The urbanization phenomenon demands forward leaning and integrated engagement from a cross section of stakeholders—including donors, national and municipal governments, citizen groups and the private sector—as both a policy and business priority. Mismanaged or unaddressed, massive urban growth in the developing world can serve to create hotbeds of extreme poverty, disease, and radical violence. Conversely, coordinated urban development and policy can capture population growth to drive economic and social dynamism, market creation, human development and climate change adaptation. Growing urban centers, especially in the developing world, will require visionary leadership with the ability to adapt to change, skilled management, new sources of funding and financing for ...

Urbanization, Opportunity, and Development

Urban centers now account for more than half of the human population, marking the first time in history that rural population is in the minority. The absolute figures are astonishing: 3.7 billion people now live in cities, and this will double by 2050. Even more dramatic is the extent to which this urbanization is centered in the developing world, where nearly 99 percent of urbanization between now and 2050 will take place. This accelerated shift towards urban life has profound implications for energy consumption, food security, politics, and human progress. While some of this change will be positive, the conditions in a number of fast growing cities highlight the potential for destabilization and dislocation. The urbanization phenomenon demands forward leaning and integrated engagement from a cross section of stakeholders—including donors, national and municipal governments, citizen groups and the private sector—as both a policy and business priority. Mismanaged or unaddressed, massive urban growth in the developing world can serve to create hotbeds of extreme poverty, disease, and radical violence. Conversely, coordinated urban development and policy can capture population growth to drive economic and social dynamism, market creation, human development and climate change adaptation. Growing urban centers, especially in the developing world, will require visionary leadership with the ability to adapt to change, skilled management, new sources of funding and financing for ...

In what ways can employment increased in urban areas?

To increase employment in urban areas, we will need to carry out the following tasks (i) Invest in basic industries which provide mass employment. (ii) Improve local and inter city transportation, so that more people can be employed to work in the transportation industry. (iii) Increase vocational education courses, so that people educated for a vacation get jobs easily. (iv) Give incentives for industry in urban areas to increase their capacity.

In what ways can employment increased in urban areas?

To increase employment in urban areas, we will need to carry out the following tasks (i) Invest in basic industries which provide mass employment. (ii) Improve local and inter city transportation, so that more people can be employed to work in the transportation industry. (iii) Increase vocational education courses, so that people educated for a vacation get jobs easily. (iv) Give incentives for industry in urban areas to increase their capacity.

Urbanization, Opportunity, and Development

Urban centers now account for more than half of the human population, marking the first time in history that rural population is in the minority. The absolute figures are astonishing: 3.7 billion people now live in cities, and this will double by 2050. Even more dramatic is the extent to which this urbanization is centered in the developing world, where nearly 99 percent of urbanization between now and 2050 will take place. This accelerated shift towards urban life has profound implications for energy consumption, food security, politics, and human progress. While some of this change will be positive, the conditions in a number of fast growing cities highlight the potential for destabilization and dislocation. The urbanization phenomenon demands forward leaning and integrated engagement from a cross section of stakeholders—including donors, national and municipal governments, citizen groups and the private sector—as both a policy and business priority. Mismanaged or unaddressed, massive urban growth in the developing world can serve to create hotbeds of extreme poverty, disease, and radical violence. Conversely, coordinated urban development and policy can capture population growth to drive economic and social dynamism, market creation, human development and climate change adaptation. Growing urban centers, especially in the developing world, will require visionary leadership with the ability to adapt to change, skilled management, new sources of funding and financing for ...