Anywhere decent left to live?
Among the
forecasts on population growth here’s news to stress those smug folk who don’t
live in big cities like Jakarta, preferring the better quality of life found in
smaller centers:
Be
prepared: Your view of the mountains will disappear behind smog; motorbike
engines will shatter your silence.
By 2015
nearly 2.5 billion people globally are expected to live in cities of up to one
million compared with 600 million housed in cities of more than five million.
In brief
the urban drift continues, but most growth will now occur in smaller cities.
That
reverses past trends. In 1940 Semarang
had 200,000, a quarter of Jakarta’s population. Since Independence the Central Java city has grown five fold, the
capital 20 fold.
Once
visitors seeking the ‘real’ Indonesia were told to head to the hills where
splay-toed men trail buffaloes through mud and leather-skinned women thresh
rice in parched paddocks. But for how
much longer?
Soon the
majority will be cramped in kampong, not raising corn and cassava for national
consumption, but problems for urban planners.
Only 30 per cent of Indonesians will live in rural areas by 2035. Twenty years ago it was the other way
around.
It’s a
demographic shift so rapid you only have to return after a couple of years to
find once-familiar landmarks turned to rubble. Few Western cities can match
Indonesia’s speed of urban change because they’re shackled by prolonged planning,
environmental concerns and rigid construction rules.
What’s
going on? Globalization, urbanization
or nation-building? Push or pull? These
questions feature in Asian Cities, New Zealand historian Malcolm
McKinnon’s study of megalopolis and metropolis in India, China and Indonesia,
focusing on the two Javanese centers mentioned above.
Western
cities are also expanding, though for different reasons. Growth in places like
Germany’s Frankfurt and Canada’s Toronto comes from international migration,
while most Asian cities rely on movements of locals seeking better wages.
The two
main exceptions are Singapore and Kuala Lumpur, where foreigners are imported
to do what the author calls the 3D jobs – dirty, difficult and dangerous.
Unlike the
opening of China to capitalism through political fiat, the economic development
of Indonesia has no precise starting point.
The fall of Soekarno in 1965 was a critical point in history; it helped
the West breathe more deeply but a flood of capital didn’t follow.
Under
Soeharto the state kept control close to the State Palace. Since his departure Jakarta has remained the
magnetic political and entertainment pole of the Republic. It seems that the much-heralded era of
reformation and decentralisation was more sound than substance.
The Big
Durian continues to seduce the hopeful and the hard up to seek their fortunes,
out-charming Medan, Makassar and other regional centers despite the capital’s
black hole reputation.
Compare
this with Shanghai, not China’s capital but a huge and powerful attractant
through its commercial energy and wealth, with 24 million residents, four
million more than Beijing, yet so easy to access.
If this
situation was replicated in Indonesia industrial Surabaya would be the nation’s
most populous. Now too late. The circling towns have expanded like cells
on a slide, creating a borderless mess of terracotta and asphalt.
Semarang
had its golden era as a trading port in the late years of Dutch colonialism,
the third largest city exporting agricultural produce from the hinterland. Now it has slipped to ninth place and
according to Dr McKinnon is “unequivocally a provincial city.”
In the West
the creation of the urban monster has been longer, slower but more consistent,
dating back to the industrial revolution, then the centralization of
government.
Asia is a
fertile area for globalization studies but it’s a discipline where locals tread
reluctantly. Says the author: “Scholarship in urban Asia remains, despite over
60 years of independent and independently-minded Asian governments, dominated
by the Western academy.”
It would be
good if this intellectual energy was leading towards solutions – but that
doesn’t seem to be the goal. Maybe
because it’s all too difficult, like the job of town planning in a culture
where rupiah, not rules, determine where and how you’ll live.
Asian
cities don’t have to be gross. Hong
Kong has been rated as the world’s most liveable by The Economist
magazine.
If Soekarno
had acted back in the 1950s Jakarta could have been another Semarang and the
nation’s capital would be Palangka Raya in Central Kalimantan. President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono keeps the
idea alive through occasional CPR, but not the necessary drip feed of dollars.
If Jakarta
can’t even complete a proper public transport system, or an athletes’ village
for the Southeast Asian games without corruption, how could it cope in
establishing an entirely new city?
Would
rebuilding be a better economic solution, despite the huge complexities and
astronomic costs? Elsewhere the models
are mixed. In 1960 Brazil shifted its
capital to Brasilia, a city that now has 3.7 million residents. Rio, the
nation’s center since the mid 16th century now has only 4.5 million.
Less
successful have been attempts to move Kuala Lumpur’s 2.6 million by creating
Putrajaya. The new city has wide roads and green parks but only 70,000
residents.
It’s a pity
that Dr McKinnon hasn’t explored these issues, preferring to concentrate on
history and theory – interesting but of limited use.
We know
Jakarta is overcrowded and already rushing towards failed city status on the
grounds of traffic management and pollution.
What are needed are books on how to fix the problem.
ASIAN
CITIES: Globalization, Urbanization and Nation Building
Malcolm
McKinnon
NIAS Press
2011
(First published in The Sunday Post, 2 September 2012)
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Thanks for sharing your story.
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