Realizing the Potential of Pakistan’s Secondary Cities

Pakistan is currently navigating an unfavorable urban trajectory. Poor urban management is preventing it from realizing the full promise of urbanization in the form of improved prosperity and livability. City growth is poorly planned, housing and service delivery lag badly, and city residents are, increasingly, exposed to environmental hazards. These conditions arise from a weak, ineffective, and unsuitable urban management and financing system that has regressed rather than strengthened over time. For Pakistan to harness the potential of its urbanization to lead it out of poverty, boost national productivity, and act as an engine of growth, the institutional and fiscal architecture of urban management and local government requires fundamental reform. The current system must be empowered by a more coherent, accountable, and capacitated structure that gives municipal institutions functional responsibility for the built environment and key infrastructure sectors (water, sewerage, solid waste, roads, and drainage, among others), within geographical jurisdictions aligned with the actual population and spatial boundaries of Pakistan’s evolving urban system. And these institutions must be anchored to a fiscal and financial system that can generate and effectively spend the resources necessary for sustainable urban development, while also encouraging private sector involvement in municipal service provision. To achieve this, concerted and sustained action is needed toward decentralization reforms at both federal and provincial levels.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2024-06-21
Subjects:URBANIZATION AND GROWTH, URBAN GOVERNANCE AND CITY SYSTEMS, URBAN DEVELOPMENT, CITY PLANNING SYSTEMS, URBAN ACCESSIBILITY, SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND COMMUNITIES, SDG 11, PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONS, SDG 16,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099060624114031544/P1756071546dd400e1ba7b1b6a2bdeb3a49
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/41756
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spelling dig-okr-10986417562024-06-21T18:15:10Z Realizing the Potential of Pakistan’s Secondary Cities World Bank URBANIZATION AND GROWTH URBAN GOVERNANCE AND CITY SYSTEMS URBAN DEVELOPMENT CITY PLANNING SYSTEMS URBAN ACCESSIBILITY SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND COMMUNITIES SDG 11 PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONS SDG 16 Pakistan is currently navigating an unfavorable urban trajectory. Poor urban management is preventing it from realizing the full promise of urbanization in the form of improved prosperity and livability. City growth is poorly planned, housing and service delivery lag badly, and city residents are, increasingly, exposed to environmental hazards. These conditions arise from a weak, ineffective, and unsuitable urban management and financing system that has regressed rather than strengthened over time. For Pakistan to harness the potential of its urbanization to lead it out of poverty, boost national productivity, and act as an engine of growth, the institutional and fiscal architecture of urban management and local government requires fundamental reform. The current system must be empowered by a more coherent, accountable, and capacitated structure that gives municipal institutions functional responsibility for the built environment and key infrastructure sectors (water, sewerage, solid waste, roads, and drainage, among others), within geographical jurisdictions aligned with the actual population and spatial boundaries of Pakistan’s evolving urban system. And these institutions must be anchored to a fiscal and financial system that can generate and effectively spend the resources necessary for sustainable urban development, while also encouraging private sector involvement in municipal service provision. To achieve this, concerted and sustained action is needed toward decentralization reforms at both federal and provincial levels. 2024-06-21T18:11:22Z 2024-06-21T18:11:22Z 2024-06-21 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099060624114031544/P1756071546dd400e1ba7b1b6a2bdeb3a49 https://hdl.handle.net/10986/41756 English en_US CC BY-NC 3.0 IGO https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf text/plain Washington, DC: World Bank
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
en_US
topic URBANIZATION AND GROWTH
URBAN GOVERNANCE AND CITY SYSTEMS
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
CITY PLANNING SYSTEMS
URBAN ACCESSIBILITY
SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND COMMUNITIES
SDG 11
PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONS
SDG 16
URBANIZATION AND GROWTH
URBAN GOVERNANCE AND CITY SYSTEMS
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
CITY PLANNING SYSTEMS
URBAN ACCESSIBILITY
SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND COMMUNITIES
SDG 11
PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONS
SDG 16
spellingShingle URBANIZATION AND GROWTH
URBAN GOVERNANCE AND CITY SYSTEMS
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
CITY PLANNING SYSTEMS
URBAN ACCESSIBILITY
SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND COMMUNITIES
SDG 11
PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONS
SDG 16
URBANIZATION AND GROWTH
URBAN GOVERNANCE AND CITY SYSTEMS
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
CITY PLANNING SYSTEMS
URBAN ACCESSIBILITY
SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND COMMUNITIES
SDG 11
PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONS
SDG 16
World Bank
Realizing the Potential of Pakistan’s Secondary Cities
description Pakistan is currently navigating an unfavorable urban trajectory. Poor urban management is preventing it from realizing the full promise of urbanization in the form of improved prosperity and livability. City growth is poorly planned, housing and service delivery lag badly, and city residents are, increasingly, exposed to environmental hazards. These conditions arise from a weak, ineffective, and unsuitable urban management and financing system that has regressed rather than strengthened over time. For Pakistan to harness the potential of its urbanization to lead it out of poverty, boost national productivity, and act as an engine of growth, the institutional and fiscal architecture of urban management and local government requires fundamental reform. The current system must be empowered by a more coherent, accountable, and capacitated structure that gives municipal institutions functional responsibility for the built environment and key infrastructure sectors (water, sewerage, solid waste, roads, and drainage, among others), within geographical jurisdictions aligned with the actual population and spatial boundaries of Pakistan’s evolving urban system. And these institutions must be anchored to a fiscal and financial system that can generate and effectively spend the resources necessary for sustainable urban development, while also encouraging private sector involvement in municipal service provision. To achieve this, concerted and sustained action is needed toward decentralization reforms at both federal and provincial levels.
format Report
topic_facet URBANIZATION AND GROWTH
URBAN GOVERNANCE AND CITY SYSTEMS
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
CITY PLANNING SYSTEMS
URBAN ACCESSIBILITY
SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND COMMUNITIES
SDG 11
PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONS
SDG 16
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Realizing the Potential of Pakistan’s Secondary Cities
title_short Realizing the Potential of Pakistan’s Secondary Cities
title_full Realizing the Potential of Pakistan’s Secondary Cities
title_fullStr Realizing the Potential of Pakistan’s Secondary Cities
title_full_unstemmed Realizing the Potential of Pakistan’s Secondary Cities
title_sort realizing the potential of pakistan’s secondary cities
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2024-06-21
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099060624114031544/P1756071546dd400e1ba7b1b6a2bdeb3a49
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/41756
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