Cali, Colombia : Toward a City Development Strategy

Although many of the problems that Cali is experiencing - social and human capital deterioration, a declining economy, and institutional crisis - are a reflection of Colombia's complicated socioeconomic situation, the city has been hit harder by the crisis than other large cities, as confirmed by the following indicators: GDP, unemployment, poverty rate, inequality, and number of homicides. According to recent estimates, the population in Cali reached the 2 million level in 1999, making the city the second largest in the country after Bogota. Internal migration increased significantly during the early 90s due to the economic boom generated by drug dealing activities, and continued in the last part of the decade, due to resettlement movements of large population groups, affected by social conflict in rural areas. However, migration flows have generated social tension in the city, as economic opportunities became scarce. The Bank engaged in a participatory process to produce a City Development Strategy (CDS), whose specific objectives are to help the city administration and stakeholders identify a strategy to overcome the current crisis, and, be a neutral facilitator in the reconstruction process. The CDS is being developed in four stages: 1) identification of the main problems; 2) development of the analytical framework; 3) dissemination of results; and, 4) development of a financial plan.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Publication biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2002
Subjects:ACCOUNTABILITY, ANALYTICAL WORK, BUSINESS COMMUNITY, CITIES, CITIES ALLIANCE, CITIES ALLIANCE PROGRAM, CITIZEN, CITIZEN PARTICIPATION, CITIZENS, CITY ADMINISTRATION, CITY DEVELOPMENT, CITY DEVELOPMENT PROCESS, CITY GOVERNANCE, CITY LEADERSHIP, CITY MAP, CITY PLANNING, CITY PLANNING DEPARTMENT, CIVIL SOCIETY, CIVIL WAR, COMMUNITY LEADERS, COMMUNITY LEVEL, CONSULTATION PROCESS, CRIME, DATA SOURCES, DEMOCRACIES, DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY, DRUG DEALING, ECONOMIC ACTIVITY, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC SECTORS, ECONOMIC STABILITY, EDUCATION LEVEL, EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT, EMPLOYMENT GENERATION, EXTERNAL SHOCKS, EXTREME POVERTY, FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT, FINANCIAL SITUATION, GLOBAL TRADE, GROWTH RATE, HEALTH CARE, HEALTH EXPENDITURES, HOUSEHOLD SURVEY, HOUSEHOLD SURVEY RESULTS, HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS, HOUSING, HUMAN CAPITAL, INCOME, INDUSTRIAL STRUCTURE, INEQUALITY, INFANT MORTALITY, INSTITUTIONAL REFORM, INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT, LABOR FORCE, LABOR MARKET, LAND DEVELOPMENT, LAND MANAGEMENT, LAND USE, LARGE CITIES, LAWS, LEGAL FRAMEWORKS, LOCAL AUTHORITIES, LOCAL GOVERNANCE, MAYORS, MORTALITY, MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENTS, MUNICIPAL SERVICES, NATIONAL EFFORTS, NATIONAL LEVEL, PARTICIPATORY PROCESSES, POLICE, POPULATION GROUPS, POVERTY ALLEVIATION, POVERTY HEADCOUNT, PRIMARY SCHOOL, PRIMARY SCHOOLS, PRIORITY AREAS, PRIVATE SECTOR, QUANTITATIVE DATA, REGULATORY FRAMEWORK, REPRESENTATIVE SURVEY, RURAL AREAS, SECONDARY DATA, SECONDARY INFORMATION, SERVICE DELIVERY, SERVICE LEVELS, SERVICE PROVISION, SHORT TERM, SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT, SOCIAL POLICY, SOCIAL PROGRAMS, SOCIAL SECURITY, SOCIAL TENSION, SOLID WASTE, SOLID WASTE COLLECTION, SOLID WASTE COLLECTION COMPANY, STAKEHOLDERS, STRUCTURAL REFORM, TEAM MEMBERS, TIME FRAME, UNEMPLOYMENT, UNEMPLOYMENT LEVELS, URBAN AREAS, URBAN DEVELOPMENT, URBAN ISSUES, URBAN LAND, URBAN MIGRATION, URBAN POPULATIONS, URBAN POVERTY, URBAN RESIDENTS, URBAN SECTOR, URBAN TRANSITION, VIOLENCE, VULNERABLE GROUPS, WORKERS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/01/1808690/cali-colombia-toward-city-development-strategy
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14086
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!