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2020 Focus 3, Brief 9 of 10, August 2000
Achieving Urban Food and Nutrition Security in the Developing WorldThreats to Urban Health Carolyn Stephens The future looks more urban than ever. As urban demographer Ellen Brennan has observed, "In a few years, roughly around 2006, a crossroads will be reached in human history, when half of the world's population will be residing in urban areas." By 2030, three-fifths of the world's population will live in urban areas. Evidence indicates, though, that this future may be more unequal than ever. The majority of urban people will live in Asia, Africa, and Latin America—in countries that are getting relatively poorer, not richer. The latest World Bank data show the ratio of income per capita in the richest countries over that in the poorest countries has increased from 11 to 1 in 1870, to 38 to 1 in 1960, and to 52 to 1 in 1985. And poverty in the poorest countries appears to have become more urbanized. An urban world with growing inequality bodes ill for the health of urban dwellers. In addition, globalization—the rapid global movement of capital, ideas, skills, and employment connected to the concentration of power in the private sector—is changing the urban physical and social environment. Consequent changes in diet and physical activity are affecting the health of all urban people. Accompanying these changes is the fact that the poor rely increasingly on the wealthy. The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) reports that private foreign investment controlled by corporations was worth US$250 billion in 1996, in contrast with less than US$50 billion in official development assistance. In the same year, foreign exchange trading by big investors amounted to US$350 trillion—more than 10 times the world's gross domestic product. The wealth of the world is now in the hands of a tiny minority of people. The ratio of the average income of the world's wealthiest 5 percent to the world's poorest 5 percent increased from 78 to 1 in 1988 to 123 to 1 in 1993. This shift of financial and political power influences development opportunities for urban areas. Cities compete against each other for foreign and private investment on the basis of their population and resources. Urban development relies on low-cost urban labor in one city or country competing with low-cost urban labor in another. As a result the well-being and health of the world's urban people can become precarious.
URBAN HEALTH AND PRIORITIES FOR ACTION But this simple view conceals the impact on health of inequalities between and within urban centers. Urbanization in developing countries has not taken place in a context that enables good physical conditions for health to be easily realized. Historically, the industrialized countries of the northern hemisphere built their economies by transforming and trading the natural-resource bases of Asia, Latin America, and Africa. These northern countries went on to control the trade system, limiting the ability of the so-called "developing" countries to follow the same route toward urbanization and development. Developing countries have three significant urban health agendas, each linked to the issue of inequity between and within cities: the resolution of health problems stemming from (1) urban poverty, such as infectious diseases and poor nutrition, (2) the current "dirty" industrialization process, and (3) the social and political environment within cities.
URBAN POVERTY
"DIRTY" INDUSTRIALIZATION This type of double health burden is linked to the dilemma of developing-country cities being forced to compete against each other in dirty development: attracting investment on the basis of extremely low environmental standards and extremely poor labor conditions. This kind of development is hazardous for the current generation but also toxic for the future. It raises the challenge of providing a form of urban development that eliminates urban poverty without introducing the effects of dirty, unsustainable industrialization.
INTRA-URBAN SOCIAL AND POLITICAL INEQUALITY
SUSTAINABLE AND EQUITABLE DEVELOPMENT If equitable, sustainable development is to be achieved, a first step may be to emphasize the use of health as a means of identifying priorities in urban policy. This would enable the urban development agenda to be guided by the long-term goal of human well-being rather than the short-term goal of economic well-being. Governmental, nongovernmental, and international organizations are developing urban initiatives—such as the highly participatory Local Agenda 21 plans, Healthy Cities, and Sustainable City Networks—that emphasize healthy and sustainable development. These initiatives incorporate intersectoral collaboration; the participation, particularly of the poor, in setting priorities; equity in distribution of services; and sustainability in decisions about investment. The forces of globalization must also be turned toward environmental and social justice, and thus to the advantage of the urban majority and the urban future. Against the attempts to shift toward equity and intersectoral collaboration, urban services have become part of the globalized economy, with large-scale privatization of urban services, including education, water, waste disposal, energy, housing, sanitation, and health. Privatization policies were intended to improve efficiency and extend delivery, but urban services appear to be moving into the hands of major multinational corporations, who then control many aspects of urban policy that were formerly in the hands of local government. The result often has been a narrowing of delivery. Macropolitical and macroeconomic processes influence the ability of decisionmakers to improve the conditions that affect the health and well-being of urban citizens. Many specialists argue that only when local governments gain control of the destiny of their cities will sustainable urban development become a reality and will we be able to achieve health security for all. For further reading see United Nations Environment Programme, Global Environmental Outlook 2000 (London: Earthscan, 1999); and Carolyn Stephens and Simon Stevenson, "From Insecurity to Sustainability: The Need for Health and Equity in the World's Urban Future," Woodrow Wilson Working Paper (Washington, D.C.: Woodrow Wilson Center, 2000). Carolyn Stephens (carolyn.stephens@lshtm.ac.uk) is a senior lecturer in environment and health policy at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and visiting professor in environment and health policy at the National University of Tucumán, Argentina. Next Brief “A 2020 Vision for Food, Agriculture, and the Environment” is an initiative of the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) to feed the world, reduce poverty, and protect the environment.
INTERNATIONAL FOOD POLICY RESEARCH INSTITUTE (IFPRI)
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