Alan Mallach | Smaller Cities in a Shrinking World

Page 1


Smaller Cities In A Shrinking World: Building a sustainable future against the odds

Alan Mallach

Source: IHME

DECLINE

Slowing growth, some decline by 2050

Decline or slow growth depending on level of immigration

The shape of the demographic future

Declining population

Continued growth beyond 2050

Eastern Europe

North America and Western Europe

Russia East Asia

Africa and Middle East Latin America and Caribbean

South and Southeast Asia

Australia and New Zealand

This is not just about the Global North

Fertility rates in the Global South 1960-2018

Fertility rates in large countries 1960-2021

The US is headed in the same direction
and we’re not happy about it

negative population growth by 2030-2035 (without immigration)

negative population growth by 2045-2050 (with 1 million/year net immigration)

US Population over 65 and under 5

Projected population change by age group in the United States 2022 to 2060 (000) +23 million people over 75 -9 million people 0 to 19

Migration is the wild card in future populations

City Suburbs

Small

Many parts of the United States are already losing population (Population change by county 2000 to 2016)

Internal migration

Parts of Florida are already losing population

County-level population change 2017-2022

Shrinking cities 2020-2023

The dominant internal migration trend is from periphery to center

Net migration by prefecture in Japan in 2016

Source: Data from Statistics Bureau of Japan; analysis by author

Climate change will affect everyone

Desertification

Effect on GDP

The global order is unraveling

The world is deglobalizing

Even before the pandemic, the pace of expansion in globalization was slowing. […] The collective impact of these trends is forcing a profound reflection on the way places and firms interact with globalization, and, in this shifting landscape, the types of levers available to attract flows of investment and people to achieve resilient territorial development.

OECD (2023)

Internal migration

Globalization, seen in recent decades as unstoppable a force as gravity, is clearly evolving in unpredictable ways. The move away from an integrated world economy is accelerating.

NEW YORK TIMES (2023)

Large City

Today, "slowbalization" appears to be moving towards deglobalization. Recent disruptions to global value chains […] have prompted governments and corporations to reconsider external dependencies. They are looking closer to home and to trusted partners for more resilient growth models.

WORLD ECONOMIC FORUM (2023)

What does all this mean?

Slower population growth

Aging population

Reduced productivity

Reduced consumption

Climate change

Environmental crises

Geopolitical conflict

Economic instability

Reduced economic growth

Reduced capital investment

Resource hoarding

Increased geographic concentration

Increased inequality

Impact on cities

Smaller, peripheral cities and regions will be hit

MEGACITIES

Peoria, IL Small cities and the globalization trap

Peoria’s high-quality farmland is devoted to producing corn and soybeans for the global market

Virtually everything Peoria consumes is imported from the global market

Peoria’s urban economy depends on Caterpillar’s production for the global market

Peoria
More and more cities will become shrinking
Large

City

cities

Internal migration

Shrinkage is not just a number

Environmental effects

Economic effects

Demographic effects

Fiscal effects

Vacant land and buildings

Reduced retail and service activity Excess infrastructure

Loss of economic opportunities

Disinvestment

Deteriorating public realm

Declining property values Increased poverty

Increased elderly population

Declining child and working-age population

Housing supply/demand mismatch

Brain drain

Reduced tax revenues

Declining municipal services

Excess public facilities

Is this the inevitable endgame?

Escaping the trap

Local food system

Distributed manufacturing

SUSTAINABLE CITY

Distributed energy supply

Remote and Hybrid work options

Networked educational opportunities AgingFriendly City

Networked health care system

Arts Green city

Environmental framework

Tree farm in Detroit

Urban agriculture in Chicago

DIY Park and garden in Riga Latvia

CSO overflow Water Park in Goria Maggiore Italy

Economic framework

Localized renewable energy systems

Localized manufacturing systems

Remote work

Service framework

Age-friendly community

Remote and hybrid healthcare

Remote and hybrid learning

Civic and social framework

Vibrant public realm

Civic participation and inclusive governance

Strong neighborhoods

Can we get there? THE CHALLENGE

Dissatisfaction with existing conditions

Adaptive leadership BUILDING

Human capital

Strong institutions

SUSTAINABLE SHRINKING CITY/REGION

www.islandpress.org/books/

Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.