Cities Today - Despite cities being centres of growth in
most countries, they are also centres of inequality, says the OECD.
To combat this, a new action plan has been launched in Paris
(21 November) by the OECD’s Inclusive
Growth in Cities Initiative to help mayors tackle inequality, boost
job creation and harness economic development.
“The Tale of Two Cities–to refer to the famous
Charles Dickens book–continues to ring true in too many places,” warned Angel
Gurría, Secretary-General, OECD.
He said that although cities are thriving and account for 60
percent of total employment creation since 2001 in the OECD, and household
incomes are on average 18 percent higher in cities than elsewhere, there is a
flipside.
“Copenhagen, Brussels, Paris and Santiago, for instance, all
record the highest Gini coefficients in their respective countries,” he said,
referring to the economic measurement of inequality.
In areas of health, education and labour markets Gurría
added that cities lag behind with “staggering disparities” and where life
expectancies vary “by an incredible 20 years across neighbourhoods in London
and Baltimore”.
The 50 mayors participating in the initiative have committed
to work together across four pillars identified in the action plan.
- Certifying
that education and training systems remediate–rather than
reproduce–inequalities.
- Creating
inclusive local labour markets in which workers across the skills spectrum
have access to quality jobs.
- Ensuring
investments in housing and urban development lead to more inclusive
physical environments and connect people to economic opportunities.
- And
leveraging investments in transport and critical public services to
generate returns for both inclusion and sustainability.
Accompanying the action plan, was a new OECD report that
highlights how in a globalised labour market, the competition for highly
skilled workers and for enterprises creating quality jobs has intensified, both
within countries and on a global scale.
Job Creation and Local Economic Development 2016 says the
gap between leading and trailing areas has widened, imposing a major constraint
on achieving inclusive national growth.
The report provides local policy advice that looks at the
design and implementation of skills, employment and entrepreneurship policies
to ensure that local economies are not trapped in a vicious cycle of poor
quality, low productivity jobs.
Gurría was joined at the meeting by Anne Hidalgo, Mayor of
Paris; Darren Walker, President of the Ford Foundation; Khalifa Sall, Mayor of
Dakar, and other mayors from around the world.
Source: Cities
Today
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