Regional Planning All - Part Conc PDF
Regional Planning All - Part Conc PDF
Regional Planning All - Part Conc PDF
Community
Organization
Sociology Geography
Regional
Development
Management
Economics
Planning
Identification of regions
Special Regions (each one being unique)
Generic Regions (containing a number of similarities)
Synthetic Regions (made up of a number of contrasting though related parts)
Definitions of Region
Definitions of region on the Web:
• the extended spatial location of something; "the farming regions of France"; "religions in all
parts of the world";
• area: a part of an animal that has a special function or is supplied by a given artery or nerve;
"in the abdominal region"
• a large indefinite location on the surface of the Earth; "penguins inhabit the polar regions"
• domain: a knowledge domain that you are interested in or are communicating about; "it was a
limited domain of discourse"; "here we enter the region of opinion"; "the realm of the occult"
wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
• In European politics, a region is the layer of government directly below the national level. The
term is especially used in relation to those regions which have some historical claim to uniqueness or
independence, or differ significantly from the rest of the country.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Region_(EU)
• The region (sometimes known as Government Office Region) is currently the highest tier of local
government in England. The powers of the regions are very limited and there are no elected
regional governments. Historically the primary subdivision of England was into counties, which
still exist in modified form. In addition, many local government functions are the responsibility
of boroughs.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Region_(England)
• An area having some characteristic or characteristics that distinguish it from other areas. A
territory of interest to people and for which one or more distinctive traits are used as the basis for
its identity.
www.geographic.org/glossary.html
• A larger-sized territory that includes many smaller places, all or most of which share similar
attributes, such as climate, landforms, plants, soils, language, religion, economy, government or
other natural or cultural attributes.
www.nmlites.org/standards/socialstudies/glossary.html
• A group of districts, located within a geographic area of a state
www.nejaycees.org/about/jargon.asp
• large and indefinite part of the earth
www.epa.gov/reva/glossary.htm
• An area of the Earth having a distinctive plant or animal life.
biology.usgs.gov/s+t/SNT/noframe/zy198.htm
• linguistic landscape of a particular region. They show which languages are spoken where, explain
how this particular situation came about historically, and discuss language-political issues
relevant in this region.
www.routledge-ny.com/ref/linguistics/
• A region of the world. For example, North America or Europe.
www.summary.net/manual/glossary.html
An area with one or more common characteristics or features, which give it a measure of
homogeneity and make it different from surrounding areas.
www.pueblo60.k12.co.us/Standard.NSF/0/4e1a7298cefa0ed08725648d0055c0f6
Elements of a region:
1.Relative homogeneity
2.Uniqueness, distinctiveness and identification
3.Blurred boundaries
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 5
Regional Planning & Development. Part I -Concept & Meaning of Region
This simple and clear classification, uniting diverse, usages, interpretations and readings
of the concept of “region”, is undoubtedly an achievement of the IGU commission.
Summarizing the result of the commission’s work, its Chairman, prominent Polish
Geographer Kazimiers Dziewonski stressed that the question of an objective existence of
regions remained disputable. He wrote: “for some affirmation of their existence becomes
a point of honor, for others it is a point of deep skepticism (it is very difficult to identify
them), or even of complete agnosticism (it is impossible to find them). Eventhough
region is an elusive concept, it is used as a base to build geographic ideas/theories
Even though there is a lot of research is conducted on regionalization, new entrants to the
field seems to ignore the earlier work and proceed in their own way.
One often comes across the situation when representatives of economic, social and other
sciences related to geography get to the study of regional development problems and of
regionalization, not taking trouble to know the already, found solutions.
Some claim that there is no particular mystique about identifying them and working with
them as units of analysis. There are ordinary, common practical geographic areas of
which social and economic improvement programs have been conceived, planned and
under region. ‘River basins, agricultural zones trade zones, metropolitan regions, and
areas of ethnic and cultural communities, areas inhabited by tribes, autonomous
administrative territorial units etc. all these are given as examples of regions. There are
two essentials stand out in the criteria of the region’s delineation; 1) an awareness of
regional problems and opportunities, 2) and an anticipated capacity to do something
about them through planning and development activities.”
Frontier regions
2. Frontier regions-usually sparsely populated areas having rich natural resources. An
intensive explosion of these resources, creation of heavy industries and new towns
are characteristic of the development of such regions (for instance, Guyana in South
America, Aswan in Egypt. Etc). North-eastern Frontier Region. Arunachal Pradesh
Depressed regions
3. Depressed regions-‘Problems areas” distinguished by much lower living standards
than the country as a whole (North Eastern Brazil, South Italy, Comilla in
Bangladesh).BIMARU States in India
4. Metropolitan regions and their hinterland (the Capital City Region-New Delhi).
1. The failure of the socio-economic development and the realization about the
necessity to change priorities and the look for compromises led to a new thinking
i.e. Growth and Equal Conditions of Life (or qualitative growth).This new thinking
emphasized …
2. The concept of ‘Spatial Social Justice’ (D. Harvey) led to a new thinking on social
and economic equality. This resulted in “Core-Periphery concept” (core areas-
advanced industrialized nations, industrially developed areas, big cities-peripheral
areas –backward areas, villages etc)
This term is very ambiguous and vague. It means “both peoples living conditions and the
goals of urban and regional planning.” But among many utilized indices, a common
denominator can be discerned, namely, “accessibility of its inhabitants to employment
alternatives, educational and medical facilities, essential public social services, a
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 9
Regional Planning & Development. Part I -Concept & Meaning of Region
On the whole, the quality of life concept includes a set of material, economic, social and
ecological conditions of life, which is considered to be indispensable, proceeding from
the ideas common for the given society and region about what is needed for a full and
happy life. These ideals are quite different in socialists, advance capitalist, and former
colonial and dependent countries. The greatest contrasts in the ideas about the necessary things
and still more important, in the real needs are found between the rich and the poor, between those
living in advanced capitalist an in developing countries.
Since the mid 1970s development from above is more and more often characterized as
dogmatic, alienating, anti-human, irrational, senseless, destructive etc. To counter
balance it, a concept of ‘development from
below’ is put forwarded in Eric Trist’s book ‘New
Directions of Hope: Recent Innovations,
Interconnecting Organizational, Industrial,
Community and Personal development’
Grassroot Experience
Eric Trist presents the experience of four local
“societies of innovation” found in economically
deprived regions of advanced capitalist countries
and striving on the basis of local initiative to
break away from the closed circle of a depressive
state. These are (1) The Jamestown Area Labour-
Management Committee in the West of the New
York State of the USA functioning since 1972;
(2) The Greater Philadelphia Partnership
functioning since 1978 (Southeast of
Pennsylvania, USA); (3). The Society of Sudbury
2001 (Northern Ontario, Canada); (4). The
Craigmillar Festival Society (Edinburgh,
Scotland, Great Britain), functioning since 1963.
(c) At the same time this “meta-problem” is strictly local and to be solved, requires
profound and diverse knowledge and work both under current conditions and from
the point of view of a long-term perspective etc.
Many things become clearer if concrete examples are taken. Let us consider in greater
detail on of the four examples given by the author- the Craigmillar Festival Society,
which is one of the oldest (functions since 1963) original and most effective societies of
this kind.
Craigmillar is a small town (25,000 residents) near Edinburgh, which failed to make use
of the successes of development in the 1950s and 1960s but which acutely felt the crisis
of the 1970s. The level of unemployment among the grown-up population is between 22
and 30% there, while it is still higher among the females. The gap between the level of
development of this town and that of the growing centers increasingly deepens. The
activity of the local society began with the organization of local arts festivals, which
began to be held as an antipode to international festivals in Edinburgh. The success of
the local festivals inspired the town residents, according to the author, it allowed to
overcome the inferiority complex, which they had developed. In the process of the
organization of these festivals the Society itself became “an all-round community
development organization”. In 1978 they brought forward “The Craigmillar
Comprehensive Plan for Action” which covers all aspects of community life and must
now be negotiated with the various authorities concerned”.
Besides the organization of festivals, the society secured the foundation of a high school
and a community centre. An important side to the activity of the Society is organisation
of social self-service by local forces. Hospitalization of elders in this town became less
expensive than in other similar centers, more children began to attend schools. The
author pays special attention to the activity of the Employment Working Party organized
here, and also expressed hope that the society will be able “ to create more industry in
Craigmillar and fill the Industrial Park the Society has acquired”. They also make
attempts at providing such conditions that unemployed would be able to be trained
professionally and to find the application of their skill in the “Market economy”. The
activities to the Society in Craigmillar culminated in the securing of a grant from the
regional development fund of the common market. One can hardly build the concept of a
cardinal renovation “from below”as in Craigmillar.
The experience of local societies is raised up to the highest level of generalization and is
announced to be a panacea against many troubles.
Trist compares the main features of the modern social systems of western society with
those, which in his opinion emerge in the process of the local innovation societies,
believing that they will “become one force which will help push Western society to
wards a new paradigm”.
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 11
Regional Planning & Development. Part I -Concept & Meaning of Region
Community
Organization
Sociology Geography
Regional
Development
Management
Economics
Planning
Definition
A region is a sub-system within a system (the country itself) and if sub-systems
develop greater inter-connectivity, the greater will be the efficiency of the system.
All regions are ‘problem regions’ in one way or the other, level of development
notwithstanding. A structural set of different types of regions has its own ‘dualism’
everywhere. The essential task of planning is to bind various regions into a system in
which only those inequalities remain in which simply cannot be obliterated.
Too small sub-regions are less significant for comprehensive planning. In the words of
Carter:
“Countries differ enormously both in size and in the variety of localized economic
communities that they contain, but in most of them there is some sort of awareness of a
small number usually form two to a dozen-spatially distinguishable division, different in
economic aspects that bear upon national policy. Beyond them there lie and indefinite
number of smaller divisions, sometimes with very clear differences of welfare and
interest separate towns and rural districts, working –class and middle-class suburbs,
manufacturing- which exclude from the discussion for a variety of reasons.”
“There has been a great deal of discussion of the regional concept, but this has not led to
any firm agreement. Probably the most prevalent view is that there is no unambiguous
method of defining an ideal region and that wherever possible spatial analysts should
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 5
Regional Planning & Development Part II Types of Regions & Regionalization of India
work with the more neutral concept of space. It is clear that a region is a supra urban on
the one hand, and a sub-area of the nation on the other. A common procedure is to
delimit the region by reference to physical criteria, administrative boundaries or data
availability. Certainly, most researchers accept that it is easier to define the core of a
region (usually a central city) than to map its outer boundary.”(Richardson)
North defined that a region should be defined in terms of its export base.
Many writers belonging to disciplines other than economics were more inclined to define
region as a homogeneous geographical region, even when they accepted such concepts as
‘export base!
A nodal region will have heterogeneous economy around it. Regional economists are
more concerned with what happens within a nodal region and spatial dimension of the
nodal region assumes importance. Population and industries agglomerate and there are
core regions with higher per capita income generation through higher production of
goods and services. Within regions there are dominant cities or nodes to which flows of
inputs, goods, people and traffic gravitate. Within the cities there are nuclei that form
business and social centres and which are discernible at a glance from an intra-
metropolitan traffic-flow density map. (Richardson). If the ‘size of the mass’ of the
nodes is large, then there will be great pull effects of the centre. However, as the distance
increases, the costs of overcoming frictions will rise and the people of different areas will
look for a different nodal point. Each region will have one or more dominant nodes and it
will be interesting to find and record as to which interior areas form the areas of
influence of one or the other node.
All functions require a particular threshold population and other facilities (each
settlement cannot have a college; or, unless there is electricity there cannot be cinema
hall; or a bank branch will require not only critical minimum deposit-credit ratio). The
size of the settlement and the hierarchy of functions are mutually determining. Lower
and higher order functions can naturally be found in the same order hierarchy of the
settlements. Thus between hamlets and metropolitan cities there are lower and higher
order functions in all types of services (from one-man post office to head post office;
from primary school to Institutions of higher learning and so on). Since not all
settlements can afford to sustain all types of functions, they depend upon other
settlements / areas for meeting their needs of services and goods and thus functional
linkages develop. Markets of various orders exist. Nothing can be bought unless
something is sold and thus all exchanges are ultimately barter, unless supported by
grants, donations and subsidies. Functional; linkages are revealed by the flows of men,
materials and money. Such linkages result in the emergence of the dominant nodes-focal
points, which attract and provide all types of flows. In a hierarchy of settlement we find
several nodal points which receive and provide flows and functions. Each node has some
settlements to support and receive and provide flows and functions. Each node has some
settlements to support and receive sustenance e.g., a city receives its food items from the
villages; while the villages receive goods of the secondary sector from the urban nodes.
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 7
Regional Planning & Development Part II Types of Regions & Regionalization of India
(Nodal points are always urban centres). Thus a nodal region is composed of
heterogeneous units which are closely inter related with each other functionally.
Functional linkages give unity to nodal region and a certain amount of functional
coherence/utility/ interdependence is always present.
Nodes attract labour while the hinterland becomes the labour catchment area if the
hinterland cannot provide jobs to the people. In some respects the boundary of a nodal
region may extend far and beyond for some facility e.g. Bombay attracts persons from
distant places in Uttar Pradesh and Bihar because the persons can find employment in
Bombay. Similarly even the rural areas of Punjab attract labour from Chhatisgarh region
of Madhya pradesh or from Eastern Uttar Pradesh or Bihar because highly paying
(comparatively speaking) employment can be found in Punjab during agricultural
operations.
All functional linkages keep in changing in nature and volume. While economic
activities are scattered in a homogeneous region, they are concentrated in or around
specific foci of activities. Inter dependence is a rule in heterogeneous region and thus
nodal region is Heterogeneous region. The demand and supply conditions at different
points / settlement in the heterogeneous region differ and that is the reason for
interdependence. Around a node (a focal point in space) revolve not only economic but
political and cultural activities also. Yet, it can be said that all activities become weak
with the distance and ultimately terminate also. The forces of distance weaken the
linkages of all types, unless it is the linkage of all areas of the country with capital of the
nation. The size of a nodal region shall depend upon the efficiency of means of
communications and transportation and all those facilities, which give rise to localization
of industries/activities at a certain place. An improvement in transportation,
communications finance, accommodation, and other facilities will widen the radius of
influence and the hinterland will get enlarged and the node will get further strengthened.
In practice, the formal and functional regions very rarely overlap neatly, and often vary
markedly. We have to “carve out” a planning region after compromising the two
approaches. That region becomes the planning region (formal or functional) which is
administratively viable. All regions are geographical regions because they exist on space
and all regions are economic regions because people cannot remain alive without being
economically active.
3. Planning Regions
Planning regions depend upon the type of multi-level planning in the country. A very
small country will naturally have one level planning. Markedly different geo-physical or
agro-climate areas may be chosen as planning region for special cases e.g., developing a
mining or plantation or power grid region. A planning region in a multi-level setup
requires regional plan, which is a spatial plan for the systematic location of functions and
facilities in relation to human settlements so that people may use them to their maximum
advantages. Infact more important than reducing the regional disparities is the task of
ensuring that backward region and rural areas have basic minimum needs. Planning
region for different activities can be different and a regional plan will be locational in
character for that activity/function. For comprehensive planning, there has to be a
national plan and then a state plan and finally district/block plans. Since a planning
region is a sub-national area demarcated for the purpose of translating national objectives
into regional programs and policies, and since plan formulation and implementation need
administrative machinery, administrative regions are generally accepted as planning
regions. This may not be wholly correct, as administrative boundaries may be
inconsistent with regional boundaries, derived from economic criteria. However, in some
cases a planning region can be small, say a city but a village cannot be (and, probably not
even a cluster of villages) a planning region unless the objective is too limited.
The hierarchy of planning region would be (I) national level (ii) macro level (iii) state
level (iv) meso level (v) and micro level.
A planning region is (or should be) large enough to enable substantial changes in the
distribution of population and employment to take place within its boundaries, yet small
enough for its planning problems to be tackled effectively. It should have a viable
resource base, a manpower base, and internal homogeneity/cohesiveness. It should be
such that satisfactory levels of mutually satisfying levels of production, exchange, and
consumption levels obtained.
Boudeville defines a planning region in the following words “It is an area displaying
some coherence or unit of economic decisions”.
In a sense macro regions are second in hierarchy, next to the national level. It is also
possible that a physical macro region may comprise parts of different states of a country
for project planning purposes. (e.g., big river valley projects, an electric grid of different
states, and, for the purpose of a particular activity (facility) planning) the macro region
will be parts of different states. State boundaries are not respected in the sense that the
macro region may transcend or cut-across administrative boundaries of the states of a
country. A macro region may not be uniform or homogeneous in all respects. It may
have homogeneity in one respect (physical complimentarity) and may have heterogeneity
in other respect (administrative boundaries). A macro region should have a common
resource base and specialization in that resource base, so that production activities can
develop on the principle of comparative advantage based on territorial division of labor.
(India has been divided into 11 to 20 macro regions-agro-climate or resource regions).
The planning Commission of India would have just 5 zonal councils-Eastern, Northern,
Central, Western and Southern comprising of certain states but beyond this there is no
macro-regionalization in India.
These so-called macro regions of India have to have inter state cooperation in the matter
of utilization of river water and electricity grids etc.
Meso Regions
Meso region can be identified with a ‘division’ of a state. Chattisgarh Region,
Bundelkhand Region, Baghelkahand Region, Mahakoshal region is usually a sub-
division of a state, comprising of several districts. There should be some identifiable
affinity in the area which may even facilitate planning. It can be cultural or
administrative region and it will be even better if it is a homogeneous physical region
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 10
Regional Planning & Development Part II Types of Regions & Regionalization of India
(resource) region. A meso region can also become a nodal region provided the combined
micro regions or parts thereof can be developed in a complementary manner. (NSS of
India has identified 58 meso regions of India but they are not shown on maps as planning
regions).
Micro Regions
In multi-level planning, district is the micro region. It becomes the lowest territorial unit
of planning in the hierarchy of planning regions. The most important reason why district
is the most viable micro region for planning is the existence of database and compact
administration. This is the area, which is viable for plan formulation with administration
for plan implementation and monitoring.
A metropolitan area can be one micro region and the area of influence can be another
micro region. A nodal point is also a micro region, though in many cases micro regions
are basically rural areas, which may have a number of minor nodes without any
organizational hierarchy influencing the entire area. The basic characteristic of a micro
region is its smallness. There can be some specific micro regions such as belts of
extraction of mineral or a reclaimed area, or a not-so-big command area of an irrigational
project.
The block level plan is integrated with the national plan, through the district and state
level plans. A block level plan is not surgically cut portion of the district plan, which has
its own logic and linkage.
At block level, most of the officers will be more concerned with the implementation of
the plans than formulating the plans. At block level, the main exercise will be to take into
account of the physical and human resources and to find out the prime moving activities
which will enable the block people to make best use of the development potential of the
block to meet the basic needs of the people.
Minimum needs can be satisfied with the production of basic goods with the help of low
entropy local resources. Yet it cannot be said that ‘external help’ will not be necessary.
Infrastructure support has to come from the developed regions. Infact, planning of the
development of the transport, communication, banking, education, medical and many
service facilities has got to be done at the national level.
At the panchayat level, basic goods and services can be arranged through the efforts of
the local people. Many activities can be so planned that they improve the socio-economic
conditions of the people without being the part of the national plan. Several activities can
be undertaken with the cooperation of the local people, with minimum of financial and
real resource support from outside e.g., development of dairying, animal husbandry,
pisciculture, poultry, soil conservation measures, optimization of the cropping pattern,
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 11
Regional Planning & Development Part II Types of Regions & Regionalization of India
production of inputs locally, improving the storage and transport facilities can be done at
the micro minor level. Many agro-based industries and tiny sector guild-type activities
can be developed at the micro-minor level. A good planning can secure ‘ruralization of
the industries’ instead of ‘industrialization of rural area’. This will involve
production of goods ‘by the masses for the masses and near the masses’.
The most important test of micro-minor planning is that the people need not look
towards the centre for it. Now days, a lot of importance is given to ‘water harvesting’.
Water is proxy for the use of modern inputs in agriculture. Much of the run-off water
goes waste and the infiltration rate is also low. If this water can be harvested, not only
the run-off water can be stored, but sub-soil water reserves can also become rich. Micro-
minor watershed development program probably will be the most important program for
a country like India. The optimum land use planning can start from the micro-minor area
only.
A developed region may become ‘overdeveloped’ in certain respects e.g., it may suffer
from the diseconomies of congestion and the Perroux’s ‘growth pole’ becomes over-
critical here. Infrastructure costs become very high and people can go into the jitters due
to pollution and stresses of various types.
A developed region is the counterpart of the backward region: the ‘positive’ side is
emphasized in case of the developed region while ‘negative’ aspects are emphasized in
case of the backward region. A developed region is one, which has exploited its
potentialities fully, which has removed the bottlenecks and speed breakers of
development. Developed regions emerge of their own because of the comparative
advantage or may emerge as a result of the diversion of funds by the government. In
many cases imbalances emerge between developed and backward regions and these
imbalances can be the creation of planners also. Many times disproportionately high
amounts of investment are made in the constituencies of the influential politicians and
some regions become far more developed than the neighboring regions. In a resource
short economy such a development may be at the cost of denying legitimate share of
investment to some other regions. Those regions where quick maximization is possible
i.e., high outputs are obtained with relatively lower levels of inputs, get further attention
and become even more developed.
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 12
Regional Planning & Development Part II Types of Regions & Regionalization of India
Backward Regions
There can be ‘backward or depressed’ regions in the developing as well as the
developed economies. Backward economies are thoroughly depressed regions.
Regions, in which the economy is largely subsistence one, have in the most co-existed
with the modern sector regions since long. There is development even in these regions
but these regions have not come out of the low level equilibrium trap. There can be
region, which may not be at
subsistence level but may be
relatively backward. Lack of
infrastructure facilities,
adverse geo-climate
conditions, low investment
rate, high rare of growth of
population, and low levels of
urbanization and
industrialization are causes
and consequences of
backwardness. In less
developed countries, even the
most ancient occupation
(agriculture) is backward and
unless it is made progressive
with massive real and
financial input support, the
region cannot come out of
backwardness. It will be
imperative that for the overall
development of the backward
regions, those industries
should be developed on priority basis which supply vital inputs to agriculture as also
those industries which take outputs of agriculture as their inputs. Thus, depressed regions
can be very poor under-developed regions, which failed to modernize.
Some vestigial regions (as the regions inhabited by the red Indians in USA/ or tribals in
India) can remain backward and may even remain near the subsistence level. The
inhibitions may have ancient traditions and may be smug in their surroundings, but the
per capita income may be much lower than in the neighboring regions. A region can be
backward because of the high population density or even without it. If we take some
selected indicators of development (e.g. road length per sq.km, literacy rate, beds per
thousand population, percentage of villages electrified, percentage of cultivated land
under irrigation, longevity, and availability of low, intermediate and high order
functions and facilities) a low total will suggest backwardness.
Intermediate regions are those regions, which are ‘islands of development around a sea
of stagnation’. Some metropolitan regions are surrounded by areas of utter penury. It
should be the task of the planners to develop linkage activities that the hinterland of such
intermediate regions also develops.
As the mines continue to yield sufficient minerals and the costs are also not prohibitive,
not only the mineral-producing region develops but it helps other regions also to
develop. After the minerals exhaust, the region will bear degraded look; people will
move away to other areas and the erstwhile area will bear a deserted look. Germany took
great pains to rehabilitate such areas and vast pits and trenches were suitably reclaimed
for various purposes like water storage, eco-forestry and even cultivation after enriching
the soil. If new deposits of minerals cannot be discovered, there can be several ways of
reclaiming wasteland and developing non-mineral based activities. Regional planning
will require a long-term plan for developing such regions after extraction is no longer a
profitable activity. The Middle East countries have made adequate planning to diversify
their economies so that after the oil wealth exhausts their economies do not relapse to
backwardness.
Cultural Regions.
A cultural region can also be quite well demarcated. (French Canada and English Canada
are such regions). In India various states are demarcated on the basis of language and
culture primarily. There are affinities of cultural origin in such region. A rich cultured
region should be rich in economic terms also.
Regionalization
Meaning of Regionalization
Regionalization is the process of delineating regions, but each time depending upon the
purpose for which the region is to be delineated. If the intention is to develop an arid
region, the ‘region’ will be differently defined, including only arid areas. If the
congestion is to be removed then the most congested and polluted areas will be included
in the ‘congested region’. If the intention is substantially reduce poverty and
unemployment, then a ‘depressed region’ is to be delineated. The homogeneity of a
region will differ with the purpose for which delineation is being made.
Geographers were always interested in the process of regionalization and were very fond
of pictorial characterization rather than scientific explanation. (Pokshishevskly).
Geographers believed that there is some sort of determinism in economic development.
USSR geographers even coined the word fortunatov for a region well endowed with
resources.
They probably meant that what is physically impossible, money cannot make it possible.
However, ‘deterministic’ situations are not too many and the man and his brain-child-
technology –can bring a lot of changes. The neo-determinism underlies the fact that as
the techno-economic conditions change, the ‘degree determinism’ also undergoes a
change to be near the reality, we need adjustments by stages. Infact both ‘determinism’
and possibilism’ are facts of life.
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 15
Regional Planning & Development Part II Types of Regions & Regionalization of India
a b c d @@ #### $$$$ %%
@ %
e f g h **** #### #### @@
@
i j k l %% %% $$$$ %%
% % %
m n o p @@ **** #### $$$$
@
q r s t **** @@ $$$$ $$$$
@
Population of Regions
a) 3800 h) 3200 o) 300 @@ = 3000-4000
b) 600 I) 2600 p) 1600 #### = <1000
c) 1800 j) 2100 q) 4100 $$$$ = 1000-2000
d) 2300 k) 1500 r) 3300 %% = 2000-3000
e) 4600 l) 2000 s) 1100 **** = >4000
f) 950 m) 3100 t) 1229
g) 756 n) 4600
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 16
Regional Planning & Development Part II Types of Regions & Regionalization of India
146
3521
SETTLEMENT PATTERN 145 PRIMARY CLUSTERS
3125
144 147 1645 2070
124
124
125 148
990 4471
104
3815
127
143 806
3155
147
128 1453
157 3511
132 129 661
399 2416
137 151
141 3896 773
6372
126 153
1497 5687
140
6232
139 138
137 8263
12
6646
FINAL CLUSTERS Minimum 6000 population
12811
DELIMITATION OF REGIONS
11214
12811
6092
8263
For e.g., if region A is the wheat region and the region B is the coal region, the weight of
the wheat index will be the largest in the former, and the weight of the coal index will be
the largest in the latter. This method is good when those criteria can be compared with
each other. However in those cases where compatibility is not possible (e.g., in case
where one feature is literacy and the other is steel production) it becomes necessary to
employ the cluster method
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 17
Regional Planning & Development Part II Types of Regions & Regionalization of India
Attempts of Regionalization
1. The first attempt in classify natural regions or physiographic regions was made by
L. Dudley Stamp (1922)
Peninsula
34 Regions of first order
74 Region of Second order
225 Subdivisions
4. SP Chaterjee (1965) scheme of classification is considered as a standard one and it is
frequently quoted by others.
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 19
Regional Planning & Development Part II Types of Regions & Regionalization of India
Economic Regionalization
Regionalization is an exercise of dividing regions of higher order into sub-regions or
aggregating regions of lower order (small units) into those of higher order (regions). This
is based on homogeneity in the selected characteristics or functional interdependence
between the nodal centre and its hinterland or between the different functional centers of
different hierarchic levels.
Application
1. Regionalization for Planning – A strategy for areal development.
2. Nodal Regionalization to create central places and functional intergration
Nath classified the country into 15 Resource Development Regions (RDRs).It is further
classified into 61 RDRs.
1. Western Himalayas 2.Eastern Himalayas
3. Lower Gangetic plain 3.Middle Gangetic Plain
4. Upper Gangetic plain 5. Trans Gangetic plane
6. Eastern plateaus & Hill regions 7. Central plateaus & Hill regions
8. Western plateaus & Hill regions 9. Southern plateaus & Hill regions
10. East coast plains & Hills 11.West coast plains & Hills
12. Gujarat plains & Hills 14.Western Dry regions
15. The Islands
Regionalization of Poverty
Regional Planning & Development
Part III of VI Parts
Part III.
Regional Imbalances & Strategies for Balanced
Regional Development in India
S.Rengasamy
Madurai Institute of Social Sciences
Community
Organization
Sociology Geography
Regional
Development
Management
Economics
Planning
Theoretical explanations
1. Classical Economist’s view 1. Classical Economist’s View:
2. Marxist view The Classical economists hardly evince any interest
3. Perrouxian view in the spatial dimension of economic development.
4. Myrdal’s view They believed that factor flows/ market forces
5. Hirschman’s view would bring equilibrium automatically. They
6. Miscellaneous theories argued that wage and income levels among regions
would not last long. They further argued that labor
would flow from (migration) low wage region to high wage region, While capital will
flow in the reverse direction (i.e., from high wage region to low wage regions).
Classicalists view failed, and many economists started questioning the “Self
Equilibrating Model” of the classical economists.
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 4
Regional Planning & Development Part III Strategies for Balanced Regional Development
Regional disparities
Social Service Indicators
Per capita Per capita Infant Life Physical
expenditure expenditure mortality expectanc quality
States on health on education per 1000 live y at birth of life
births 1971 1971 index
Andhra Pradesh 21.2 36.5 113.69 53.89 20.6
Assam 17.0 38.1 112.22 53.53 22.7
Bihar 12.2 27.7 103.62 54.70 23.4
Gujarat 22.9 47.9 152.20 55.33 24.0
Haryana 28.0 46.4 100 60.00. 52.1
Karnataka 19.9 43.1 100 50.52 37.6
Kerala 28.7 76.5 55.65 61.00 100
Madhya Pradesh 17.2 29.9 151.69 53.89 14.8
Maharashtra 24.2 51.6 97.32 58.72 57.6
Orissa 17.2 37.6 103.30 56.30 35.2
Punjab 30.6 58.8 103.29 61.23 61.6
Rajasthan 25.3 39.1 147.80 60.23 31.4
Tamil Nadu 20.9 45.9 117.20 55.00 36.4
Uttar Pradesh 11.7 27.7 159.26 54.29 5.3
West Bengal 22.0 43.2 100.25 57.26 45.8
All India 20.2 40.1 ------- -------- -------
2. Marxist View:
Regional disparity is the characteristic feature of capitalism and is aggravated by rivalry
and competition and the search of maximal profits is the very nature of capitalist
relations of production any by the private ownership of the means of production.
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 5
Regional Planning & Development Part III Strategies for Balanced Regional Development
3. Perrouxian View:
French Economist Perroux in his attempt to understand the modern process of economic
development, discovered that,
a. Growth does not appear everywhere at the same time.
b. It manifests itself in points or poles of growth with variable
intensities.
c. It spreads by different channels and with varying terminal
effects for the economy as a whole.
[Perroux heavily relied on Schumpeter’s theory of economic
development to explain why growth appears in a particular place.
A/C to Schumpeter “development occurs as a result of discontinuous spurts in a dynamic
world”]
Myrdal’s View:
The outstanding Swedish Economist Gunnar Myrdal was one of the
first among western scholars to pay attention to the grave consequences,
not only economic but political as well, which may result from the
aggravation of disparities in economic development. In his book,
“Economic Theory and Underdeveloped Regions” he presented the
“Cumulative Causation Model”.
Myrdal explains the impact of the growing region (nucleus) on rest of the economy with
the help of two opposite kinds of forces, which he calls the “Spread effect” and “Back
wash effect”.
“The Spread effect”
“The Spread effect” – refers to all growth inducing effects i.e., inflow of raw materials,
new technologies, demand for the agricultural products, If strong enough, these forces
may start a cumulative expansionary process in the lagging regions.
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 6
Regional Planning & Development Part III Strategies for Balanced Regional Development
Ø Cotton industry showed a tendency to disperse that too in a limited sense. The
centers of concentration shifted from Bombay to Ahmadabad and to Coimbatore.
Ø As far as soap industry is concerned Bengal & Bombay shared 86.3% of the
workers.
Ø As far as woolen industry is concerned United Province, Punjab, Bombay shared
80.0% of the total workers employed.
Bihar, U.P. and Orissa accounted for 31.1% of the total population
21.3% of the productive capital
14.5% of the persons employed
17.6% of the gross output
Consumption of Electricity:
Ø Disparities in per capita industrial consumption of electricity. ( KWh)
1969 –70 1976-77
National average 57.5 68.4
Gujarat 88.6 119.8
Karnataka 64.1 107.8
Kerala 57.3 68.1
Maharashtra 114.0 120.4
Orissa 57.6 71.2
Punjab 138.5 143.5
Tamilnadu 74.5 76.8
West Bengal 86.3 78.8
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 9
Regional Planning & Development Part III Strategies for Balanced Regional Development
Ø Out of the total licenses Maharashtra à 51% gone to 3 districts Bombay, Thana
for issued for Poona
West Bengal à 71% gone to Calcutta, Howrah &
Hoogly
Tamil Nadu à 59% gone to Madras & Coimbatore.
In 1968 Pande Working Committee identified the backward areas of our country.
Everyday expected that these areas would get more licenses based on that. What
happened?
Ø The backward areas of relatively more developed states received more licenses.
Ø Out of the total 486 licenses issued during the period 1970 – 1974, 227 licenses were
given to the backward districts located in Maharashtra, West Bengal, Gujarat and
Tamilnadu.
The above facts demonstrate that industrial licensing policy has all along favored the
already developed states while the claims of the backward states were ignored. Even
when recommendations were made to grant more licenses to backward areas, the
backward areas of the developed states received a preferential treatment. Even the
licenses given to backward areas were not appropriate, since they did not possess
sufficient spread effects and significant linkages.
Disparities in the development has been a theme of great academic interest and practical
significance during the post world war 2nd period when a large number of colonies
attained political independence and became conscious of the distressing disparity that
existed between those colonies and their erstwhile colonial master. The contemporary
world consisted of two-different realms; one that of the west, immensely rich,
industrialized, urbanized and with a history of steady development since the
industrial revolution, the other of newly independent countries, abysmally poor,
agricultural, rural and with an equally long history of exploitation and stagnation.
This dualism could not escape the concern of academicians, politicians and
administrators.
Several studies were undertaken and numerous theories were postulated to explain the
global duality of development and underdevelopment. Hinderink and Sterkenburg
(1978) classified the studies dealing with regional disparities into three types:
• those which use space as a mere framework to describe regional differences in
development;
• those which employ space, particularly in terms of physical space and built
environment, as an explanatory variable to analyze spatial inequality; and
• those which adopt space with reference to the level and nature of its development, as
a variable to be explained through historically developed politico-economic social
structure.
Spatial theories of unequal development were also grouped by Nash (1963) into three
categories of spatial differentiation, spatial diffusion and spatial integration. This
classification was based on the mode of analysis adopted. An improvement upon it was
suggested by Browlet (1980) who again offered a three-fold classification of various
theories into those which deal with comparative analysis of development pattern, which
make inductive study of development stages in a specific region, and which examine the
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 13
Regional Planning & Development Part III Strategies for Balanced Regional Development
process of spatial diffusion of development. This grouping was done essentially in the
context of diffusionist development paradigm which highlights the role of spatial
interaction.
Some other theories described the sequence of development phases, and viewed the
existing gap between developed and developing countries as a matter of time lag. The
chief exponents of this historical thesis were German scholars namely list, Brune,
Hilderbrand, Bucher, Schmoller and Sombart.
Rostow (1960) borrowing an analogy from the flight of an airplane noted five stages in
economic transformation of a capitalist society: traditional society precondition for
take-off, drive to maturity and age of High Mass consumption. The different
countries of the world could be assigned to a particular stage a given point in time.
Theories reviewed above explained development and underdevelopment in an area and
regional disparities accruing out of them through the intrinsic conditions. Role of social,
psychological and spatial factors were emphasized. The historical perspective was
strong in most of them.
Gender Equality Disparity Map of India-1981 Gender Equality Disparity Map of India -1991
In just contrast some theories, such as ‘Growth Pole’ of Perroux, Boudville and
Richardson, ‘Spatial Diffusion’ of Haggerstrand (1967): and ‘Growth Foci’ of Misra
et al. (1976) gave due recognition to spread effects of development. These theories
envisaged that if metropolitan development is sustained at high level, differences
between center and periphery may be eliminated, as the economic dynamism of the
major cities trickle down to smaller places and ultimately into most tradition bound
peripheral areas.
The spatial interaction theories derived their meaning from three different context of
space economy; free market mechanism, colonial setting and neocolonial situation.
Free market mechanism was always biased in favor of development areas. ‘Core-
Periphery Theory’ by Friedmann (1966), ‘Circular and Cumulative Causation
Theory’ by Myrdal (1957) represented this context. These theories are well known and
need no elaboration.
The second was colonial setting in which the imperial powers flourished at the cost of
the their colonies siphoning off the latter resources. This was well illustrated by colonial
dependency theory of Kundu and Raza (1982) and in the writing of Marxist scholars
such as Davey (1975) and Pavlov et all, (1975).
The third context was postcolonial situation in which the newly independent developing
countries remained dependent on developed countries and found it difficult to extricate
themselves from the network of exploitation. Amin (1974) called this process
‘Peripheral Capitalism’ and Santos used the term ‘dependent capitalism’ (1978). The
other exponents of this idea were Baram (1970), Frank (1972), Fanon (1963) and Potekin
(1962).
Most of the scholars referred to above tried to explain multifaceted and multicausal
phenomenon of development and regional disparities in development by a one-
dimensional theory. This amounted to some distortion of the fact. Therefore to reach on
a conclusive result an indepth analysis of ground realities in regard to development
disparities in different regions and various countries of the world is needed.
1. Spatial convergence
The first hypothesis was spatial convergence based on development experiences of the
western developed countries. It was stated that regional disparities tend to lessen with
the process of development. The hypothesis found its support in the ‘Spread and
Backwash Theory’ of Myrdal (1957), ‘Trickle Down and Polarization Effect
Theory’ of Hirschman (1958), Urban Hierarchy Thesis for Development Innovation
of Berry (1969), Growth Pole Theory of Perraux, Baudville and Richardson, Spatial
Diffusion of Haggerstrand (1967) and Growth Foci of Misra et al., (1976).
All these facts lead to fourth hypothesis that there is no association between development
and regional disparities. In short it may be stated as ‘no trade-off hypothesis.’ Now it
would be better to investigate the position of regional disparities in India in the light of
above discussed hypothesis.
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 17
Regional Planning & Development Part III Strategies for Balanced Regional Development
REGIONAL PLANNING
Synopsis
Region
Planning
Regional Planning Definitions
Need for Regional Planning / objectives
Features of Regional Planning
Unit of Planning – meaning
Characteristics of planning region
Role of regional planning
Regional planning and five year plans
Regional planning / development policies (Three conceptualizations)
Region:
It means ‘a tract of land; an area homogeneous with respect to announced criteria’
“larger than any single urban area i.e. ‘supra urban’ space’.
Regional development is the provision of aid and other assistance to regions which
are less economically developed. Regional development may be domestic or
international in nature. The implications and scope of regional development may
therefore vary in accordance with the definition of a region, and how the region and
its boundaries are perceived internally and externally.
The word ‘region’ is also used to stand for a tract of land, which is smaller than the
individual state but larger than its basic territorial unit, namely the district. This meaning
has been recognized in governmental pronouncements as well. The planning
commission, for instance, employs this term to convey such a meaning, but in none of
the five-year plans, it has made this explicit.
Planning:
Planning means making decisions in advance Planning may be viewed as highly
disciplined and formalized activity through which a society induces change in itself. It
involves the application of scientific knowledge in order to solve the problems and
achieve the goals of a social system. Any social system, therefore, which has adopted
planning, whether it is a firm, family, town or region may hope to determine its own
future. Further, in evaluating the steps taken to reach this future, it may learn and
through learning it may engage in a continual process of self-realization.
Regional Planning
Regional Planning is essentially a process of orderly and systematic anticipation of the
future of a region, involving recommendations of the necessary remedial and
constructive actions by public and private agencies to achieve the objectives of the
plan/regional community.
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Regional Planning & Development Part III Strategies for Balanced Regional Development
Regional planning may involve extensive areas that include one or more regions or more
limited areas such as drainage basins or metropolitan areas.
eg :
Southern Regions (Tamilnadu, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala) European
Economic Market, Colombo Plan, SAARC Damodar Valley, TVA, Vaigai Periyar
Command Area Madurai Metropolitan Planning Area.
Unit of Planning:
The important question in regional planning is
“What should be the unit of planning”?
Planning Region (Unit)
(1) should be large enough to take investment decisions of economic size,
(2) should be able to supply its own industry with necessary raw materials and
labour,
(3) should have a homogeneous economic structure,
(4) contain at least one growth point and
(5) Have a common approach to and awareness of its problems”. – Klaussen
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Regional Planning & Development Part III Strategies for Balanced Regional Development
Planning region to be an area that is large enough to enable substantial changes in the
distribution of population and employment to take place within its boundaries, yet which
is small enough for its planning problems to be viewed as a whole – Keeble.
1) Passive or indicative role is to point out how the sectoral investments decision can
be integrated at the regional level and the advantages there of.
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 20
Regional Planning & Development Part III Strategies for Balanced Regional Development
IV FYP: Attempts were made to identify the backward regions (Pande Committee) for
the purpose of granting concessions and financial assistance to industries (Wanchoo
Committee) was initiated and weight age given to backward states in
allocation of central assistance.
Considering the period of planning as a whole the policies adopted by the govt can be
classified into either of the following categories.
Regionalization of Poverty
Region 1 is the most clearly demarcated – not only did it have the lowest incidence of poverty in
1999 (less than 6 percent) but also the steepest decline over the period considered. It stretches from
the Western Plain, Kutch and part of Kathiwaar peninsular into the Northern Plain and central
highlands, and further into the fertile irrigated areas of Punjab and Haryana.
Region 2 is the 'heart' of the poverty belt, which had been identified as early as the early 1970s
accounting for substantial part of the rural poor in 1999. It covers the area of the Eastern
(Chattisgarh) plateau and Eastern Ghats and extending into the central highlands and part of the
Deccan plateau. This is a hot semi-arid region with limited scope for irrigation.
Region 3 is the medium-poverty region extending over Eastern UP, Bihar and into the Central
Highlands. It had more potential for irrigation than Region 2 though the soil is less favorable for
staple agriculture.
Region 4 is a more heterogeneous one stretching along the east coast of India. It includes the hot
sub-humid to humid plains of Bengal and Assam and stretches north-east to include the area of the
Eastern Himalayas, and further south into the semi-arid per humid area of the Eastern coastal plain.
Region 5 is the Western Gnats and Coastal Plain with red laterite and alluvium derived soils and
humid to per humid ecological conditions.
Region 6 is the arid region of the Deccan, including parts of Telengana and the Eastern Ghats with
red and black soil.
Region 7 is the Eastern Ghats and Tamil Nadu uplands the Karnataka Deccan plateau with red
loamy soil.
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 23
Regional Planning & Development Part III Strategies for Balanced Regional Development
There were no districts from Gujarat, Goa, Kerala, Punjab, Andhra Pradesh and Tamilnadu.
The committee did not consider the northeastern states and Jammu and
Kashmir as it felt "they had problems which were specific and peculiar to them".
The desert, drought prone and backward areas (integrated development) Bill, 2006
‘‘Backward areas’’ include the desert and drought prone areas with very low
or scanty rainfall and the areas which are economically, industrially, educationally and
socially lagging behind from the rest of the country and so declared by Central
Government by notification in the Official Gazette;
Drought should not be viewed as merely a physical phenomenon or natural event. Its
impacts on society result from the interplay between a natural event (less precipitation
than expected resulting from natural climatic variability) and the demand people place on
water supply. Human beings often exacerbate the impact of drought. Recent droughts in
both developing and developed countries and the resulting economic and environmental
impacts and personal hardships have underscored the vulnerability of all societies to this
“natural” hazard.
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Regional Planning & Development Part III Strategies for Balanced Regional Development
There are two main kinds of drought definitions: conceptual and operational.
Conceptual Definitions of Drought
Conceptual definitions, formulated in general terms, help people understand the concept
of drought. For example: Drought is a protracted period of deficient precipitation
resulting in extensive damage to crops, resulting in loss of yield.
Meteorological Drought
Meteorological drought is defined usually on the basis of the degree of dryness (in
comparison to some “normal” or average amount) and the duration of the dry period.
Definitions of meteorological drought must be considered as region specific since the
atmospheric conditions that result in deficiencies of precipitation are highly variable
from region to region. For example, some definitions of meteorological drought identify
periods of drought on the basis of the number of days with precipitation less than some
specified threshold. This measure is only appropriate for regions characterized by a year-
round precipitation regime such as a tropical rainforest, humid subtropical climate, or
humid mid-latitude climate
Agricultural Drought
Agricultural drought links various characteristics of meteorological (or hydrological)
drought to agricultural impacts, focusing on precipitation shortages, differences between
actual and potential evapotranspiration, soil water deficits, reduced ground water or
reservoir levels, and so forth. Plant water demand depends on prevailing weather
conditions, biological characteristics of the specific plant, its stage of growth, and the
physical and biological properties of the soil. A good definition of agricultural drought
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 28
Regional Planning & Development Part III Strategies for Balanced Regional Development
should be able to account for the variable susceptibility of crops during different stages
of crop development, from emergence to maturity. Deficient topsoil moisture at planting
may hinder germination, leading to low plant populations per hectare and a reduction of
final yield. However, if topsoil moisture is sufficient for early growth requirements,
deficiencies in subsoil moisture at this early stage may not affect final yield if subsoil
moisture is replenished as the growing season progresses or if rainfall meets plant water
needs.
Hydrological Drought
When precipitation returns to normal and meteorological drought conditions have abated,
the sequence is repeated for the recovery of surface and subsurface water supplies. Soil
water reserves are replenished first, followed by stream flow, reservoirs and lakes, and
ground water. Drought impacts may diminish rapidly in the agricultural sector because of
its reliance on soil water, but linger for months or even years in other sectors dependent
on stored surface or subsurface supplies. Ground water users, often the last to be affected
by drought during its onset, may be last to experience a return to normal water levels.
The length of the recovery period is a function of the intensity of the drought, its
duration, and the quantity of precipitation received as the episode terminates.
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 31
Regional Planning & Development Part III Strategies for Balanced Regional Development
Socioeconomic Drought
In most instances, the demand for economic goods is increasing as a result of increasing
population and per capita consumption. Supply may also increase because of improved
production efficiency, technology, or the construction of reservoirs that increase surface
water storage capacity. If both supply and demand are increasing, the critical factor is the
relative rate of change. Is demand increasing more rapidly than supply? If so,
vulnerability and the incidence of drought may increase in the future as supply and
demand trends converge.
Drought-II
Meaning & Explanation
A drought is defined as an extended period of abnormally dry weather that causes water
shortages and crop damage. A drought starts when total rainfall is well below average for
several months. Other signs of drought include: unusually low river flows, low ground
water and reservoir levels, very dry soil, reduced crop yields or even crop failure, and
algae blooms in reservoirs and lakes. Groundwater is not replenished because not enough
rain is falling to wet the soil's entire surface area and to be absorbed properly.
A drought is a period of time when there is not enough water to support agricultural,
urban, human, or environmental water needs. A drought usually refers to an extended
period of below-normal rainfall, but can also be caused by drying bores or lakes, or
anything that reduces the amount of liquid water available. Although what is considered
"normal" varies from one region to another, drought is a recurring feature of nearly all
the world's climatic regions. The effects of drought vary greatly, depending on
agricultural, urban and environmental water needs. Water companies, farmers, and
ranchers are those that suffer the worst as a result of drought.
Conceptually, there are three main types of drought:
• Meteorological drought is brought about when there is a prolonged period with less
than average precipitation. Meteorological drought usually precedes the other kinds of
drought.
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 32
Regional Planning & Development Part III Strategies for Balanced Regional Development
• Agricultural drought is brought about when there is insufficient moisture for crop or
range production. This condition can arise, even in times of average precipitation,
owing to soil conditions or agricultural techniques.
• Hydrological drought is brought about when the water reserves available in sources
such as aquifers, lakes, and reservoirs falls below the statistical average. This condition
can arise, even in times of average (or above average) precipitation, when increased
usage of water diminishes the reserves.
Drought conditions lead to increased growth of algae in lakes, ponds and other slow-
moving bodies of water. The water is no longer a safe place for fish and other aquatic
life. Animals that drink from the rivers or streams can become sick and die; swimmers in
affected waters may become ill. The ecology of an area may be affected by the drying of
wetlands, with wading birds dying out. Crop production will be lower than usual; trees
may die. Wildfires spring up; lack of irrigation can lead to famine and disease.
Consequences
Periods of drought can have significant environmental, economic and social
consequences.
Drought can also reduce water quality, because lower water flows reduce dilution of
pollutants and increase contamination of remaining water sources in that
1900, India
250,000 to 3.25 million people died from drought, starvation and disease.
1928-30, Northwest China
Famine resulted in over 3 million deaths.
1936, Sichuan Province, China
This was the worst drought in the modern history of the area. 34 million farmers were
displaced and 25 million people starved
Policy Objectives
Industrial policy should address the vision of our nation i.e.
Rapid agricultural and industrial development of our country,
Rapid expansion of opportunities for gainful employment,
Progressive reduction of social and economic disparities,
Removal of poverty and attainment of self-reliance
The Industrial Policy Resolution of 1948 was followed by the Industrial Policy
Resolution of 1956 which had as its objective the acceleration of the rate of economic
growth and the speeding up of industrialization as a means of achieving a socialist
pattern of society. In 1956, capital was scarce and the base of entrepreneurship not strong
enough. Hence, the 1956 Industrial policy Resolution gave primacy to the role of the
State to assume a predominant and direct responsibility for industrial development.
The Industrial Policy Statement of 1973, inter alia, identified high priority industries
where investment from large industrial houses and foreign companies would be
permitted.
The Industrial Policy Statement of 1977 laid emphasis on decentralization and on the
role of small scale, tiny and cottage industries.
A number of policy and procedural changes were introduced in 1985 and 1986 under the
leadership of Shri Rajiv Gandhi aimed at increasing productivity, reducing costs and
improving quality. The accent was on opening the domestic market to increased
competition and readying our industry to stand on its own in the face of international
competition. The public sector was freed from a number of constraints and given a larger
measure of autonomy.
Government has decided to take a series of initiatives in respect of the policies relating to
the following areas.
A. Industrial Licensing.
B. Foreign Investment.
C. Foreign Technology Agreements.
D. Public Sector Policy.
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 35
Regional Planning & Development Part III Strategies for Balanced Regional Development
E. MRTP Act.
A package for the Small and Tiny Sectors of industry is being announced separately.
B. Foreign Investment
While freeing Indian industry from official controls, opportunities for promoting foreign
investment in India should also be fully exploited. In view of the significant development
of India’s industrial economy in the last 40 years, the general resilience, size and level of
sophistication achieved, and the significant changes that have also taken place in the
world industrial economy, the relationship between domestic and foreign industry needs
to be much more dynamic than it has been in terms of both technology and investment.
Foreign investment would bring attendant advantages of technology transfer, marketing
expertise, introduction of modern managerial techniques and new possibilities for
promotion of exports. This is particularly necessary in the changing global scenario of
industrial and economic co-operation marked by mobility of capital. The Government
will, therefore, welcome foreign investment which is in the interest of the country’s
industrial development.
It is time therefore that the Government adopt a new approach to public enterprises.
There must be a great commitment to the support of public enterprises which are
essential for the operation of the industrial economy. Measures must be taken to make
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 36
Regional Planning & Development Part III Strategies for Balanced Regional Development
these enterprises more growth oriented and technically dynamic. Units which may be
faltering at present but are potentially viable must be structured and given a new lease of
life. The priority areas for growth of public enterprises in the future will be the
followings:
• Essential infrastructure goods and services.
• Exploration and exploitation of oil and mineral resources.
• Technology development and building of manufacturing capabilities in areas which
are crucial in the long term development of the economy and where private sector
investment is inadequate
• Manufacture of products where strategic considerations predominate such as defense
equipment
At the same time the public sector will not be barred from entering areas not specifically
reserved for it.
The principal objectives sought to be achieved through the MRTP Act are as follows:-
i.Prevention of concentration of economic power to the common detriment, control of
monopolies.
ii.Prohibition of monopolies and restrictive and unfair trade practices.
F. Decisions of Government
A. Industrial Licensing Policy
Procedural Consequences
B. Foreign Investment
C. Foreign Technology Agreements
D. Public Sector
E. MRTP Act
• Attracting investments
• Generating employment
• Leveraging on raw material sources, skilled manpower
resources, proximity to end-use markets, etc.
• Adding to and improving social infrastructure in terms
of healthcare and educational facilities Industrial Estates
have led to the development of large urban regions
especially in the States wherein large-scale city/ town development has taken place.
Bharuch, Vapi and Valsad in Gujarat and Nashik and Nagpur in Maharashtra are
examples of such developments.
would encompass:
• The State Government
• A promotional agency set up by the State like the State Industrial Development
Corporation (SIDC) or a State Industrial Estate Promotional Authority (SIEPA)
• The Private Sector
• Financial Institutions
Land Acquisition
Land acquisition is considered to be a major hindrance in setting up any industrial estate
on account of two main reasons:
• Inability to acquire contiguous land due to reluctance of some owners to sell the land
• Problems in fixing the compensation price of the land
Sustainability
The quality of Infrastructure of the Industrial Estates is India is deteriorating, thereby
defeating the purpose of their creation. Sustainability of the Industrial Estates is
therefore becoming an important issue, with the State Government finding it difficult to
maintain the infrastructure facilities in these estates. Deterioration of infrastructure
facilities affects the performance of the industrial units, which in turn affects the revenue
source for the estates. Hence, a vicious cycle is created, leading to the failure of the
industrial park.
Fiscal Concessions
Tamilnadu --Industrial Development
S.Rengasamy. Madurai Institute of Social Sciences 40
Regional Planning & Development Part III Strategies for Balanced Regional Development
The details of area acquired, developed and sold upto 31.3.04 are given below -
In acres
Total area acquired 21,343.73
Total allottable area 15957.29
Total area allotted 6,764.26
Number of units allotted 1,131
Area Development expenditure incurred so far Rs.31645 lakhs.
SIPCOT is promoting a Food Park in the SIPCOT Industrial Complex at Nilakottai over
an extent of 100 acres at a cost of Rs.13.00 crores.
S.Rengasamy
Madurai Institute of Social Sciences
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S.Rengasamy -Madurai Institute of Social Sciences
Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
In addition to these factors, a region can also grow due to an increase in the level of
demand for its commodities from the other regions within the country or outside the
country.
Thus in regional analysis, growth of a region can result either from endogenous (within)
factors or from exogenous (outside) factors or both. Sometimes growth may result from a
right location of industries/services. Consequently there are theories of regional growth
which attempt to explain the growth of a region in terms of
1. Endogenously induced process. e.g. Sector theory, stage theory
2. Exogenously induced process e.g. Export base model
3. Spatially induced process e.g. Growth pole, Central place
Demand for a product is proportionate to its price. A small change in the price may lead to a
greater change in demand. In such cases the demand is called elastic. On the other hand,
even a big change in price may not cause any change in demand. Such demand is called
inelastic e.g. salt.
When income increases, demand for secondary & tertiary products and services increase.
average earnings per worker in different sectors. The theory is empirically verifiable in terms
of cross section and historical trends in different countries or major regions within them.
The sector theory with its emphasis on structural changes, differences in elasticity of demand
and productivity differences among sectors throws light on some important
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Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
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Sector Theory
The three-sector hypothesis is an economic theory which divides economies into three sectors of
activity: extraction of raw materials (primary), manufacturing (secondary), and services
(tertiary).
Primary sector: Involves the extraction and production of raw materials, such as corn, coal,
wood and iron. (A coal miner and a fisherman would be workers in the primary sector.)
Secondary sector: Involves the transformation of raw or intermediate materials into goods
e.g. manufacturing steel into cars, or textiles into clothing. (A builder and a dressmaker would
be workers in the secondary sector.)
Tertiary sector: Involves the provision of services to consumers and businesses, such as baby-
sitting, cinema and banking. (A shopkeeper and an accountant would be workers in the tertiary
sector.)
Based on ownership the economy may be subdivided into:
1.Public sector 2.Private sector 3.Voluntary sector
Based on the type of product produced, the economy may be subdivided into:
Industrial sector & Service Sector
According to the three sector economic theory the main focus of an economy's activity shifts
from the primary, through the secondary and finally to the tertiary sector. The process as
essentially positive, and results in increase in quality of life, social security, blossoming of
education and culture, higher level of qualifications, humanization of work, and avoidance of
unemployment.
Countries with a low per capita income are in an early stage of development; the main part of
their national income is achieved through production in the primary sector. Countries in a more
advanced state of development, with a medium national income, generate their income mostly
in the secondary sector. In highly developed countries with a high income, the tertiary sector
dominates the total output of the economy.
The distribution of the workforce among the three sectors progresses through different stages
First phase: Traditional civilizations
Workforce quotas:
* Primary sector: 70% * Secondary sector: 20% * Tertiary sector: 10%
This phase represents a society which is scientifically not yet very developed, with a negligible
use of machinery. The state of development corresponds to that of European countries in the
early middle ages, or that of a modern-day developing country.
Second phase: Transitional period
Workforce quotas:
* Primary sector: 20% * Secondary sector: 50% * Tertiary sector: 30%
More machinery is deployed in the primary sector, which reduces the number of workers
needed. As a result the demand for machinery production in the second sector increases. The
transitional phase begins with an event which can be identified with industrialization: far-
reaching mechanization (and therefore automation) of manufacture, such as the use of
conveyor belts.
The tertiary sector begins to develop, as do the financial sector and the power of the state.
Third phase: Tertiary civilization
Workforce quotas:
* Primary sector: 10% * Secondary sector: 20% * Tertiary sector: 70%
The primary and secondary sectors are increasingly dominated by automation, and the demand
for workforce numbers falls in these sectors. It is replaced by the growing demands of the
tertiary sector. The situation now corresponds to modern-day industrial societies and the society
of the future, the service or post-industrial society. Today the tertiary sector has grown to such
an enormous size that it is sometimes further divided into an information-based quaternary
sector, and even a quinary sector based on non-profit services.
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Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
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Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
non-industrialized region may reach a limit to its growth and start decaying, suggesting that if
a region is to continue to increase its per capita income it must eventually industrialize.
Export Base Model (EBM) emphasis the exogenous factors in regional growth. It points out
that regions are not closed areas but are open to the flows of trade.
Export Base Model (EBM) indicates that growth of a region depends upon the growth of the
regional export base; Regional export depends on the expansion in demand external to the
region. As a consequence of export sales, income in the region increases leading to an
expansion of residentiary activities, development of external economics and further regional
growth.
The export base theory, initially developed in the context of the growth of urban areas was
used to explain the process of regional economic development by D.C North. He looks at the
region as a territory developing around a common export base. He thinks that the growth
of a region “is closely tied to the success of its exports and it may take place either as
result of the improved position of existing exports relative to competing areas or as a
result of the development of new exports.” Understanding the comparative advantage in
producing goods and services in demand to the existing markets outside the region, which in
turn attracts productive factors in a region facilitates the growth of a region.
The distinction between basic and non-basic activities is crucial to the theory of export
base. The basic activities are those the product of which is intended for the export
market, while the non-basic or residentiary activities are those which cater to the local
market. The non-basic activities are regarded as depending upon the basic activities and the
ratio of income or employment generated in the two types of activities is taken as a
multiplier. The expansion of the export base in response to increasing outside demand is seen
as the principal factor determining the growth of income in a region through the multiplier
effect on the residentiary activities.
Calculating Multiplier
Calculating Multiplier
m = Increase in total income in basic activities 10000 + non basic activities 20000
Increase in total income of basic activities 10000
In a region, if the income in basic activities is increased by 10,000 units and this results in
increase in income in non-basic activities by 20,000 units we have 10,000 +
20,000=30,000/10,000 = 3 Income multiplier = 3
The chief merit of the export base theory lies in the fact that it links the growth of a region
with changes in demand in the other regions of the nation and the world.
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Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
Benefits:
1. When a region specializes in the production of a few goods due to inter-regional trade and
division of labor, it exports those commodities, which it produces cheaper, in exchange for
what others can produce at a lower cost. It leads to increase in regional income, raises the
level of out put in the export sector and raises growth.
2. Higher the level of income and output breaks the vicious cycle of poverty.
3. When the export base is increasing, many entrepreneurs will enter into it; competition
arises; it leads to lower the cost of production either by technological improvement or better
use of the factors of production.
4. As a consequence of the expansion of income received from outside, increased
investment in residentiary activity will take place.
5. Exports provide the basis for the importation of capital from outside.
However, in spite of its wide appeal the export base theory has been severely criticized on a
number of accounts.
Firstly, as Tiebout points out “there is no reason to assume that exports are the sole or
even the most important autonomous variable determining regional income. Such other
items as business investment, government expenditure and the volume of residential
construction may be just as autonomous with respect to regional income as are exports.
Secondly, the theory errs in ignoring the role of internal growth sequences and in treating the
residentiary activities as purely passive. The development of the residentiary activities is
itself an important determinant of a growth of a region.
Thirdly, the volume of exports from a region is also the result of the income elasticity of
demand. Although the export base theory may be able to explain the process of growth of
small regions depending upon exports, the growth of large regions like Eastern U.P. cannot
be explained without reference to endogenous factors operating in the region.
In addition to the above three criticisms, another important criticism against EBM is, at times
export base won’t lead to the growth of the regional economy.
E.g.
Ø Additional income acquired through export may be frittered away on imported luxury
goods.
Ø The businessmen who acquire such income may not invest in the same region.
Ø Some times export trade may lead to backwash effect in the underdeveloped regions.
E.g. Bihar & Orissa they have a wide export base but not experienced growth
Ø When the exports are made to developed regions, it will lead to negative demonstration
effect; and will affect the capital formation in the region.
Conclusion:
Inter-regional trade opens new opportunities of specialization and development for the
regions engaged in it. Export base model bring into use hither to unexploited natural
resources and may free the regions from the limitations of their own domestic markets.
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– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
Input-Output Analysis
Leontief (1951) developed input-output model. It helps to understand and determine the
interdependence of various sectors of the economy. It assumes that economy consists of a
number of interacting industries i.e. the output of one industry may used as an input for other
industry
Input Output
- Something which is brought for the enterprise - Something which is sold by it.
- Input-that which is procured - Output-that which is produced
- Represents the expenditure of the firm - Receipt part of the firm
- Sum of the money values of inputs is the total cost - Sum of the money values of the
output is the total revenue
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Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
Town
Dairyfarming
GreenVegetables / Horticulture
Pulses/cereals
Firewood
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Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
1) In the ring closest to the city, those items that could bear transportation least of all, or on
which transportation charges would be out of proportion to the market price, would be
produced.
E.g. items perishable in nature, items less in weight, dairy farming, horticulture crops,
vegetables etc.
2) More distant belts would specialize in products, which were more in weight and volume,
but fetched higher prices in the market.
Alfred Weber
The first comprehensive effort at developing a theory of location was made by Alfred Weber
(1909). Weber also emphasized the cost factors (least cost approach) to the theory of
industrial location.
A/c to Weber, location depends upon
a) Raw materials
b) Cost of transporting raw materials
c) Cost of labour
d) Agglomeration & deglomeration tendencies
b,c,d are considered as a primary regional factors which influence the location of industries.
Weber emphasis that the best location is the place where the production costs would be
lowest.
Demand Approach:
August Losch was the proponent of this approach. He criticized the least cost approach for
omitting the demand can serve an important role in determining the location of industry. He
further argued that the best location would be that which would command, the largest market
area, since this would bring in the highest sales revenue. Point of largest sales should be
Formation of Hexagons
Suppose there is a farmer who produces bear over and above his requirements. If OP is the
price at the brewery, which is at P, those living there will buy PQ bottles of bear. Further
away, the price is higher by the amount of the freight, and the demand consequently shrinks.
When the price costs are PF, the total price rises to OF and the demand shrinks to Zero. Thus
PF will be the extreme sales radius for bear. By rotating the triangle PQF on PQ as an axis we
obtain the demand cone, whose volume gives the total sales of the brewery at point P and
thus denote the market area of the brewery.
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Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
These diagrams
illustrates how
circular shaped
markets get
transformed
into hexagon
shaped markets
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Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
It is possible that other farms may also produce surplus beer, which they would like to sell in
the market. As long as profits are made, new breweries will continue to be established, each
brewery having a circular market area.
As the number of breweries increases, the circular areas touch each other, but even now, the
whole space is not covered and some area will remain unserved.
The only possibility by which the total area can be served is through overlapping circles.
Ultimately hexagons are formed. The hexagonal form is the most efficient one since among
all the possibilities of utilizing the corners, the hexagon retains most of the advantages of the
circle.
Hexagonal arrangement ensures efficient division of space between a numbers of central
places.
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Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
Walter Christaller (1933) has discovered that there is some ordering principle governing the
distribution of towns and cities, that is, settlements concerned with the provision of goods and
services.
Christaller claims that the theory is organically based on the “ The crystallization of mass
around a nucleus is, in inorganic as well as organic nature, an elementary form of the
order of things, which belong together – a centralistic order. This order is not only a
human mode of thinking, existing in the human world of imagination and developed because
people demand order; it in fact exists out of the inherent pattern of matter.”
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Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
The growth of a central place is also dependant on numerous factors such as (1) the amount
of support that is required for a particular function called threshold population, (2) Spatial
competition, and (3) the chance of a particular central place for the location of new functions.
Central place theory is usually explained by using three concepts associated with it.
1. Centrality
2. Threshold
3.Range of central good.
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Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
1. Centrality.
The centrality of a settlement (urban centre) is defined as the ratio between the services
provided and the local needs of its inhabitants. The increasing or decreasing centrality of a
place depends on the extent to which it functions for the surrounding region. Christaller give
a simple mathematical explanation. If the town has an aggregate importance of B, of which
Bz represents the town’s population, then B – Bz = the surplus of importance for the
surrounding region, and it is this, the magnitude of the surplus, that shows the degree to
which the town is a central place.
How is it possible to measure the centrally of a place and its importance as such?
Other indicators
business turnovers of the shops
number of central functions such as whole sale and retail stores
professional services located in a settlement
2. Threshold
Threshold is the minimum sales volume needed to support a business or service; below this
level it will not be profitable to supply a good or a service
As far as the spatial development plans / programs are concerned, central place theory is
more understandable and more viable, if it is formulated in a series of simple concepts, such
as the range of a good / service and of threshold. By using these concepts, the planners can
visualize a hierarchical structure of central places to provide goods and services.
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Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
Now let us assume a farmer selling his produce at point A as in the diagram. Other farmers
are willing to travel distance ‘a’ to purchase from this farmer. Since we have assumed that
travel is equally easy in all directions, the market area for the farmer at A is given by the
circle with radius ‘a’. In
time more producers may
develop their own separate
market areas as shown in
the diagram. With the
development of
transportation and
communications the
market areas will expand
and there will be an
attempt to cover the
maximum possible space.
With circular market areas
we can have a situation as
in the diagram. While in
the diagram there are
several unserved areas (the
shaded region in the
figure), in the diagram
there is considerable
overlapping. Neither of
these instances gives a
stable result. While in the
former case the unserved
areas will have to be split
equally between
neighboring areas, in the
latter consumers in the
shaded region will tend to
choose the nearest centre.
Ultimately hexagonal market areas will emerge as given in the diagram. It is only this
hexagonal arrangement that ensures an efficient division of space between a number of
central places.
The k-value is the total number of settlements of a certain order served by a central place of
the next higher order. As would be clear from Fig.5, each hamlet is shared between three
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Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
villages as shown by the arrows. Since a village has six hamlets at the corners of the hexagon
surrounding it, each village serves [(1/3)*6] = 2 hamlets. Adding to this the hamlet part of
the functional structure of the village itself (which is obviously served by the
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Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
The administrative principle is based upon the idea that each centre should have complete
control of the six surrounding areas with no divided allegiance. Thus, in this case, sharing of
the lower order centers between the higher order centers is not permitted. Therefore, it is
K = 7.
Central place theory remains even today unsurpassed as a coherent model of spatial
organization of the service activities of man. Central place theory indicates that the region
can be served by goods of various types, if the central places producing different ranges of
goods / services are evenly distributed. The distances separating the settlements will be
greater in case of higher centers and proportionally less in the case of lower order centers.
All the central places constitute a hierarchy from the smallest villages to the largest towns of
national importance.
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Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
Criticism
1. Applicable only to service sector which is only a part of the total economy.
2. The hierarchy system would be distorted by the location of primary or manufacturing
industry.
3. The assumption that the consumer will act rationally and patronize the nearest center is
not correct.
4. Most criticized for its static and descriptive nature, as it deals with its relationship
between centers and their hinterlands only at one point of time, but fails to take into account
the evolutionary process of spatial structure i.e. how the structure has evolved and might
change in future.
However with certain modifications central place theory can be used as a starting point for
the spatial development of tertiary activities and social services in any situation. Not with
standing its limitations one has to admit that it is a marked improvement over Van Thunen’s
theory even today, it provides the most rational approach to the arrangement of human
activities, apart from manufacturing.
August Losch, refined the central place theory by incorporating non-service activities in its
functions, August Losch model postulated that there is one superior centre where all goods
are produced. The size of the centers increases with distance form the central place and those
small centers tend to be located about half way in between larger ones. Losch considered that
the size of the hexagon not only in relation to a geographical centre, but also, in relation to
the goods produced. Thus a particular centre may have several hexagonal markets for its
different products as transport cost is a function of distance, a particular industry X with
lower cost transportation will have a bigger hexagonal market area than Y, given the same
economics of scale.
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Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
Assumptions:
The concept of growth poles and growth centers is based on certain assumption about the real
world.
1. Human activities must cluster together to generate internal and external economics of scale.
2. If clustering is allowed, it may entail heavy social costs in terms of congestion, diseconomies of
scale and spatial imbalances in social and economic development.
3. The autonomous process, which generate clustering of human activities and there by
create spatial imbalances in economic development, can be directed through policy interventions
to generate growth foci in areas where they do not exist.
Perroux Hypothesis:
One of the basic objectives
of Perroux’s hypothesis is to
advance a dynamic theory
economic growth, taking the
concept of innovative firms
as the starting point. To
him large economic units
are innovative. It exerts its
influence on the economy through inter-
industrial linkages. Without explaining how
the leading industry with strong inter-
industry linkages finds a location at which to
form a nucleus around which other industries
cluster, he concluded that such clusters will
become growth poles if several leading and
propulsive industries come together to form
a complex large enough to exert a determining influence over its industrial environment.
The core idea of the growth poles theory is that economic development, or growth, is not uniform over
an entire region, but instead takes place around a specific pole. This pole is often characterized by a key
industry around which linked industries develop, mainly through direct and indirect effects. The
expansion of this key industry implies the expansion of output, employment, related investments, as well
as new technologies and new industrial sectors. Because of scale and agglomeration economies near the
growth pole, regional development is unbalanced. Transportation, especially transport terminals, can play
a significant role in such a process. The more dependant or related an activity is to transportation, the
more likely and strong this relationship. At a later stage, the emergence of a secondary growth pole is
possible, mainly if a secondary industrial sector emerges with its own linked industries.
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Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
their environment in the sense of exercising reversible and partially reversible influences on
other economic units by reason of their dimension, negotiations.
The close relationship between scale of operations, dominance and impulses to innovate
became the most important features of Perroux’s theory and lead to the concepts of dynamic
propulsive firm and leading propulsive industry.
Characteristics –Dynamic & leading propulsive firm
The characteristics of a dynamic The characteristics of a leading
propulsive firm are propulsive industry are also similar. Such
Ø it is relatively large an industry has
Ø has a high ability to innovate Ø highly advanced level of technology and
Ø belongs to a relatively fast growing managerial expertise
sector and Ø high income elasticity of demand for its
Ø the quantity and intensity of its products
interrelations with other sectors of the Ø marked local multiplier effects and
economy are important enough for the Ø strong inter-industry linkages with other
induced effects to be transmitted to them. sectors
It was Boudeville who gave geographic content to Perroux’s economic space. He defined a
‘growth pole’ as a set of expanding industries located in an urban area and it includes
further development of economic activity throughout its zone of influence. The place
where these ‘expanding’ or ‘propulsive’ or ‘dominant industries’ are located in the
region becomes the poles of the region and agglomeration tendencies are promoted.
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– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
Thus Schumpeterian theory of development, Theory of backward and forward linkages and External
economies acts as a fulcrum to establish activities, industries & services in an urban area, from there
emanates centrifugal forces and to which centripetal forces are attracted.
Thus the growth pole theory postulates that if we carefully plan the public investment
programs to be concentrated or located in a small number of favorable locations then it will
have maximum spread effects on a regional growth.
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Because of this, the underdeveloped countries today regard it as the most promising hope for
regenerating the economy of backward areas.
To develop backward regions, one has to implant potential propulsive industries there and
concentrate investments in the selected poles rather than spread them thinly over the whole
region.
Even though it promotes structural imbalance over the whole region, it is justified that
concentration of expansionary momentum at the poles will result in higher per capita income
level in the region as a whole.
Concentration of investments and public expenditure in a few selected points will enable
more effective use of resources and there would be better chance of generating enough
external economies.
1. Inapplicability
Growth Pole theory is inapplicable to varied regional problems. In resource rich, well
populated but socially and economically backward regions, the growth policy has not been a
success.
e.g. Visakapatnam Port – Shipyard as a core
Rourkela & Bhilai – modern steel plant as core
The impact of these projects on the regional economy has, however, not been spectacular and
the so called leading industry in each case failed to generate development impulses in the
hinter land. Except for the physical development that happened in the area, people lead the
same traditional lives as they always have. The leading industries are closely linked with
distant manufacturing centers. In their immediate regional environment, there is hardly any
spread effect.
3. Functional Rigidity:
Growth pole hypothesis is functionally rigid by emphasizing productive activities and
economic opportunities created through dynamic propulsive industries. In third world
countries this is not enough. Addition to this (i,e, productive activities), growth pole must
function as (1) Central places (2) Innovative and growth promoting centers, (3) Social
interaction points. It is therefore to get rid of functional rigidities, attached with the growth
pole concept.
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Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
Population 30,000 Head quarters of the extension Will have grocery store general
covering 5 central officers, minor govt. merchant shops, minor repair facilities,
2. Service
villages + 5,000 functionaries; focal points for tailor, larger shops, restaurants,
population in the social intercourse primary and middle school, sub-post
Centre
centers plus 10,000 economic and emotional processing units, junior college, primary
to 25,000 population integration of the respective sub level specialized medical facilities etc.
of the growth point region; linked with sister growth
itself points by state highways and
municipal town or with the service centers by
taluk head quarters. district/local road net works.
Coverage – 10 to 12 There will be 500 growth centers Predominance of secondary activities;
lakhs of population; in the country as a whole. will have collecting, storage and
plus 50, 000 to District headquarters; acts as processing facilities for agricultural
5,00,000 population counter magnets to large urban products; will produce agricultural
of the growth centre centers like Bombay, Madras, inputs such as fertilizers, pesticides, and
4. Growth Poles
from 5 lakhs to 25 country; state headquarters centers and points within the area of
lakhs – It will serve a their command; will perform highly
Poles
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S.Rengasamy -Madurai Institute of Social Sciences
Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
The growth centre strategy was followed by erstwhile socialist countries and also by many
developing countries. Even countries like France, Italy and India had their own version of growth
centers. Under the Community Development Program, the block headquarter was intended to be
growth centre for rural development. Under the new industrial policy of India, the district
industrial centre was to facilitate emergence of the industrial growth centers in each district.
Urban centers already exist can be converted into growth centers if better linkages are developed
with the hinterland. Complementary economic activities can be made to converge at a centre.
Growth centers can be developed through planning for the locational convergence of activities in
their compatible combination. However, any geographical agglomeration of activities is not
automatically developmental. There has to be appropriate mix of activities with strong linkages
with the economy of the hinterland.
If some large villages and towns can serve the hinterlands with services and become nodal points
of transportation network and have various types of local-resources-based industries, they can
become growth centers. A growth centre should provide basic infrastructure, functions and
facilities for the commercial agriculture. Growth centers should create such conditions that
distress migration from rural areas is arrested.
A growth centre must have good-sized industries and/or many small-scale industrial units thriving
to become growth centre. In India the structure of industries did not conform to the needs of the
rural people. The vertical hierarchy of (a) growth foci/central village, (b) service centers, (c)
growth points, (d) growth centers and (e) growth poles did not develop diversified industries
needed for the development of the primary sector, the rural areas and the people of the
hinterland. Instead of supplementing the traditional occupational skills and crafts, the industries
of the growth centers often supplanted them.
“The growth pole theory has proved to be inapplicable to developing countries marked with dual
economies. The growth poles transplanted in such economies have remained poles without a
deeply rooted broad base. The propulsive industries located in the poles have failed to diffuse
development in the hinterland. To suit the socio-economic conditions of the developing
countries, the growth pole theory has been modified and the concept of system of growth foci
has been evolved. In a very limited way the concept has been accepted in several developing
countries as a tool to develop backward areas and regions while at the same time integrate the
traditional and modern sectors of the economy into a single whole”. R.P.Misra
Such an extension of the growth pole theory opens up immense possibilities for the
application of this theory in promoting the process of regional and national economic growth.
By ensuring a linked pattern of hierarchy of human settlements, it also successfully avoids
the damages of over urbanization and of depressed areas co-existing with developed areas.
The problem of providing an adequate institutional infrastructure in the rural areas is also
properly looked after. Adoption of this strategy leads to what Misra calls “decentralized
concentration”.
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S.Rengasamy -Madurai Institute of Social Sciences
Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
Part-I
Backwash effects of international and inter regional economic relations: spread-effects
theory.
Myrdal believes that international and inter-regional economic relations in practice involve
unequal exchanges in the sense that the weak are
always exploited by the strong. Belief in the
competitive market benefiting all is misplaced.
International trade resulted in the immiserisation process in less developed countries. When
foreigners invested in less developed countries they usually invested in plantation, mining
and a few selected industries. These investments created lop-sided development in the
countries because the nature of development was dualistic. These investments did not trigger
off growth impulses in the hinterland.
The precious resources of the nations were drained off. The people by and large remained as
backward as ever in the vicinity of big projects. The skilled personnel who worked there
developed feudal and colonial approach to the development problems. These were the
backwash effects of the development. Capital, skills and people moved out of backward
regions to the developed regions, leaving the latter poor and dry.
The spread effects of development were just a few and disjointed or discontinuous. These
spread effects were those which gave expansionary momentum from the centers of economic
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S.Rengasamy -Madurai Institute of Social Sciences
Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
expansion to other regions, and were centrifugal in nature. The main cause of economic
backwardness and regional disparities has been the strong backwash effects and the weak
spread effects.
Everything clustered in certain regions from art, literature, education and culture to medical
facilities, science, commerce, banking, insurance, power development etc. Big cities
developed in port areas. Banking system so developed that the credit-deposit ratios went
against the poor regions and while deposits were collected from poor regions, credit facilities
for investment was given to developed regions.
Another distressing effect of the past development pattern was that the big industries and
urban centers, not only not helped the small industries or cottage industries and rural sectors
but positively made them further backward. Handicraft industries died a miserable and
lingering death without government support due to unhealthy competition from the developed
sector. Even agriculture could not develop in these regions.
There were some spread effects from the nodal regions to the hinterland. The hinterland did
supply raw materials etc, to the centers of development and in turn received consumer goods.
However, these spread effects never helped in the self-expansion process in the rural areas.
The two types of effects were never in equilibrium. The position was that SPE (spread
effects) > BWE (backwash effects) in developed regions while in the less developed
countries or regions the BWE > SPE. Spread effects continued to become stronger in
developed countries while backwash effects continued to become even more widespread in
backward countries and regions. This was the type of “dynamism” in the past, and to a large
extends even now between the developed and backward regions.
In the developed regions and countries “development becomes automatic process and
nothing succeeds like success”. In the backward regions and countries “poverty
becomes its own cause and nothing fails like failure”.
Another aspect of these effects is that while the income elasticity of demand for agricultural
products is not high, it is pretty high for industrial products. The terms of trade, therefore,
change in favour of the sector, which is already developed. When the terms of trade go
against the backward sectors, they have to supply more in real terms to get the same amount
of real supplies from the other sector/region/countries. This dampens the supply responses
further. They cannot increase the prices and they cannot get the advantage of reducing the
prices also, because of the low-income elasticity of demand.
Money earned in these sector/regions/countries is not reinvested in these very sectors but is
repatriated to the developed sector, regions and countries. Increased exports from the
backward sectors in the past led to inflationary pressure, increasing poverty, balance of
payment difficulties, conspicuous consumption and absence of favorable multiplier effects.
There were barriers galore to the spread effects, which included the unhelpful attitude of the
rich countries and regions, sectors and people and also of the governments.
27
S.Rengasamy -Madurai Institute of Social Sciences
Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
Part II
The cumulative causation theory of development and backwardness
The theory of cumulative causation has been built upon the above two effects viz, the
backwash effects and the spread effects. The cumulative causation theory emphasized that
poverty is further perpetuated by poverty (where backwash effects overwhelm the spread
effects), and affluence is further promoted by affluence, (where spread effects overwhelm the
backwash effects).
Core-Periphery Model
In Core-Periphery
backward regions Model
problems create more problems; in developed regions auto-solution
solve all problems. There isisa failure
Core-periphery theory based on theand
story notion
therethat
is aas one region
success story. or state expands in
economic prosperity, it must engulf regions nearby to ensure ongoing economic and
Thepolitical
reboundedsuccess.
effectsThe
and area of causation
circular high growth becomes
effects are the known
net resultasofthe
the core, and effects
backwash the
neighboring area is
and the spread effects. the periphery. Cores and peripheries may be towns, cities, states, or
nations.
TheisCore-Periphery
There model (see
inter-locking relation below)inhelps
by which explain why
the cumulative some poverty
process, inner city areas enjoy
becomes its own
considerable
cause prosperity, whilst
whereas development promotesothers display
further all the signs of urban deprivation and
development.
poverty.
Services, investment and jobs are concentrated in the core Central Business District
(CBD), but accessible inner city areas may benefit from a trickle down of wealth from
the core. For example, in some areas there may be a through-flow of office workers to
the inner city seeking low-price lunchtime meals. The core also provides work for inner
city residents.
Core-Periphery Model Spread Effects
The development of new industry in parts of the inner city encourage the concentration
of further industrial activity via 'cumulative causation' or multiplier effect as shown in
the model below:
Less accessible inner city areas may experience a backwash effect, with the little
investment that does occur in the inner city becoming concentrated close to the CBD,
widening the poverty-wealth gap. This is illustrated in the diagram below, a reversal of
the core-periphery model.
28
S.Rengasamy -Madurai Institute of Social Sciences
Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
Myrdal wrote: “If the spread effects are sustained or accelerated further and backwash effects
are resisted or rebounded back to their origin, the pace of economic development of
Introduction of a new
industry or expansion of
an existing industry
Improved pool of new labour Backward linkages to firms Backward linkages to firms
supplying raw materials or further processing the product
component parts or using it as a component
part Area becomes a
Increased demand for
services (shops, schools, growth pole
hospitals etc)
backward regions or class will be improved in terms of time distances. These two effects
originate at the centre of economic expansion i.e. growth centers for lower order support
functions and at the growth poles for higher functions. Since the two effects are counter-
balanced on tangent areas of the two influence circles, it would be imperative to pressurize a
positive force of changes leading to upward movement. The role of “big push” becomes
obvious to break through the stagnating situation. Economic incentive to producers, in terms
of differential rates of capital subsidy, market subsidy, support price, fiscal support should be
granted. These would generate rebound effects on the backwash effects.”
Myrdral writes that if the rebound effects are well directed, the spread effects can develop a
region. Since the spread effects gradually decline at constant rate with increase in spatial
distance from the growth centre, it would be in the fitness of things to locate sub-growth
centre, in such future growth potential areas. It would be of much avail to raise intensity of
spread effects at point of equilibrium (rather than at existing growth centre), and thereby to
extend existing zone of influence to that of other growth centers.
The ‘vicious circle’ type theory of cumulative causation emphasizes that excessive backwash
effects keep a less developed country poor. Inequalities do not get reduced on their own but
get accentuated. Disequilibrium causes further disequilibrium.
He writes: “The idea I want to expound is that, in the normal case, there is no tendency
towards automatic self-stabilization in the social system. The system is not by itself moving
towards any sort of balance between forces, but is constantly moving away from such a
situation. In the normal case a change does not call forth-countervailing changes, but instead,
supporting changes, which move the system in the same direction as the first change but
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S.Rengasamy -Madurai Institute of Social Sciences
Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
much further. Because of such circular causation a social process tends to become
cumulative and often to gather speed at an accelerating rate.”
Thus (as we have seen if the BWE >SPE there will be cumulative causation towards poverty
and vice versa), if it is intended that spread effects should overwhelm backwash effects, then
state intervention (SI) effect should exceed adverse cumulative causation effects.
Myrdal contention is that “the play of the forces in market normally tends to increase,
rather than decrease, the inequality between regions”. Once a particular region starts
growing faster than the average, the “efficiency wage” in that region tends to fall. (It means
that as the efficiency and productivity increase, the per unit wages–burden on the cost of
production of commodities falls). This region gains comparative advantage over other
regions and it becomes cumulative. This has reinforcing effects in terms of industrial
development giving rise to widening regional inequality.
Myrdal’s theory is counter-periphery model. The favorable effects flow from the centre to
the periphery. Periphery supplies raw materials and raw human power to the centre. The
centre supplies the technical know-how and finished output for consumption and inputs also.
Core activities are at the centre. Subsidiary activities are in the periphery area. After some
time the activities in the periphery may give rise to new core regions. This new core region
will become the new centre after some time. Then it will from this place that new peripheral
regions will develop.
When periphery becomes the net loser the effects are backwash effects. When the centre
becomes the net gainer, the effects are spread effects for the core activity region.
When the spread effects dominate, the core region develops further. In such a case there will
be economic integration between the centre and the periphery, which will give rise to a more
homogeneous spatial system.
When backwash effects dominate, there will be lack of complementarity and divergences will
develop. Periphery will remain weak; only centre will develop and dualism in growth is
promoted.
Under such circumstances, the core will continue to experience a circular upward reinforcing
trend of favorable effects and the periphery will have a reverse experience.
Cumulative causation theory proves (i) that market mechanism will not bring equality
between regions but will increase inequalities, and (ii) nothing short of government
intervention will check the backwash effects from getting cumulative.
The process of cumulative causation starts accidentally due to “momentum of an early start”
and it be just by chance. Once the growth starts, the external and internal economies bring
continuous growth at the expense of other localities and regions where relative stagnation or
regression becomes the opposite pattern. In backward regions there is outflow of resources,
human power, and capital.
Development of infrastructure and directly productive investment brings spread effects, and
they induce technical advance and all types of industries grow. “In reality, the expanding,
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S.Rengasamy -Madurai Institute of Social Sciences
Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
stagnating and regressing localities are arranged in a fairly continuous series on different
levels, with all possible gradations between the extremes.
Part III
Getting out of the trap of cumulative causation of backwardness
If the remedial measures are to be conceived, than naturally they will consist of removing
following causes.
If the centre and the core are in the semi-colonial relationship with the periphery, then such
development programs which provide for greater complementarity, integration and linkages
are called for, all efforts are to be geared towards ending the socio-economic dualism in
development in less developed countries. Myrdal goes so far as to suggest that the developed
countries should now transfer funds and technical knowledge to less developed countries on
mass scale so that the latter get the spread effects as compensation for the past backwash
effects.
Myrdal has made many other recommendations also. He recommends promotion of capital
goods and import substitution industries and also of those industries which permit
simultaneous development outside the sphere of modern large-scale industry. He wants
employment creation to be the main plank for poverty removal.
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S.Rengasamy -Madurai Institute of Social Sciences
Regional Planning Part III –Regional Growth Theories - Sector/Stage Theories- Export Base Model
– Central Place Theory /Growth Pole Hypothesis/Cumulative Causation Theory
Institutional Reforms:
Myrdal laments the collusion among politicians, officials and business people in
appropriating the gains of planning to themselves. Myrdal wants far reaching institutional
reforms that should bring the benefits the planning to the masses that will annihilate the
vested interest groups.
Critical Evaluation
Appreciation
Myrdal is internationally respected for his views. A western economist, yet he exposed the
backwash effects of international trade on the poor countries and regions. Though not a
communist, yet he proved that the so-called competitive markets instead of solving the
problems of backward regions, sector and people accentuate them.
Myrdal theses have made important contributions to the theories of convergence and
divergence, and agglomeration and locational economics and the theory of “vicious circles”.
He is for balanced growth and wanted it to be initiated, directed and sustained by the
government. He becomes an important supporter of the theory of sponsored growth.
The analysis part of the Myrdal’s writings is found to be much more satisfactory than the
recommendatory part. He could not develop a complete theory of development, in which he
could have written in details about the growth process from the start to the pinnacle.
32