ACADEMIC
READING (IELTS)
UNLIKELY
BOOMTOWNS; THE WORLD’S HOTTEST CITIES
Megacities
like London, New York and Tokyo loom large in our imaginations. They are still
associated with fortune, fame and the future. They can dominate national
economies and politics. The last fifty years has been their era, as the number
of cities with more than ten million people grew from two to twenty. But with
all respect to the science-fiction novelists who have envisioned a future of
urban giants, their day is over. The typical growth rate of the population
within the megacity has slowed from more than eight per cent in the 1980s to
less than half that over the last five years, and numbers are expected to be
static in the next quarter century. Instead, the coming years will belong to a
smaller, far humbler relation – the second city.
Within
a few years, more people will live in cities than in the countryside for the
first time in human history. But increasingly, the urban core itself
downsizing. Already, half the city dwellers in the world live in metropolises
with fewer than half – a – million residents. Second Cities – from exurbs, residential areas outside the
suburbs of a town, to regional centres – are booming. Between 2000 and 2015,
the world’s smallest cities (with under 500,000 people) will grow by 23 per
cent, while the next smallest (one million to five million people) will grow by
27 per cent. This trend is the result of dramatic shifts, including the global
real – estate bubble; increasing international migration; cheaper transport;
new technologies, and the fact that the baby – boom generation is reaching
retirement age.
The
emergence of Second Cities from flowed naturally (if unexpectedly) from the
earlier success of the megacities. In the 1990s, megacities boomed as global
markets did. This was particularly true in areas with high – tech or “knowledge
– based” industries like finance. Bonuses got bigger, bankers got richer, and
real estate prices in the world’s most sought – after cities soared. The result
has been the creation of what demographer William Frey of the Washington –
based Brookings Institute calls ‘gated regions’ in which both the city and many
of the surrounding suburbs have become unaffordable for all but the very
wealthy. ‘economically, after a city reaches a certain size its productivity
starts to fall, ‘notes Mario Pezzini, head of the regional – competitiveness division
of the OECD. He puts the tipping point at about six million people, after which
costs, travel times and the occasional chaos ‘create a situation in which the
centre of the city may be a great place, but only for the rich, and the
outlying areas become harder to live and work in’.
One
reaction to this phenomenon is further sprawl – high prices in the urban core
and traditional suburbs drive people to distant exurbs with extreme commutes
into big cities. As Frey notes, in the major US metropolitan areas, average
commuting times have doubled over the last fifteen years.
Why
does one town become a booming Second City while another fails? The answer
hinges on whether a community has the wherewithal to exploit the forces pushing
people and business out of the megacities. One key is excellent transport
links, especially to the biggest commercial centres. Though barely a decade
old, Goyang is South Korea’s fastest – growing city in part because it is 30
minutes by subway from Seoul.
Another
growth driver Second Cities is the decentralization of work, driven in large
part by new technologies. While more financial deals are done now in big
capitals like New York and London than ever before, it is also clear that
plenty of booming service industries are leaving for ‘Rising Urban Stars’ like
Dubai, Montpellier and Cape Town. These places have not only improves their internet
backbones, but often have technical institutes and universities that turn out
the kinds of talent that populate growth industries.
Consider
Montpellier, France, a case study in urban decentralization. Until the 1980s,
it was like a big Mediterranean village, but one with a strong university, many
lovely villas and an IBM manufacturing base. Once the high – speed train lines
were built, Parisians began pouring in for weekend breaks. Some bought houses,
creating a critical mass of middle – class professionals who began taking
advantage of flexible working systems to do three days in Paris and two down South,
where things seemed less pressured. Soon, big companies began looking at the
area: a number of medical technology and electronics firms came to town, and
IBM put more investment into service business there. To cater to the incoming
professionals, the city began building amenities; an opera house, a tram line
to discourage cars in the city centre. The result, says French urban – planning
expert Nacima Baron, is that ‘the city is now full of cosmopolitan business
people. It’s a new society’.
All
this means that Second Cities won’t stay small. Indeed some countries are
actively promoting their growth. Italy, for example, is trying to create
tourist hubs of towns close to each other with distinctive buildings and
offering different yet complementary cultural activities. Devolution of
policymaking power is leaving many lesser cities more free than ever to shape
their destinies. To them; this is your era. Don’t blow it.
Questions 1-3
Choose
THREE letters A – G
Write
your answers in boxes 1 – 3 on your answer sheet
Which
THREE of the following statements
are true of megacities, according to the text?
A. They
tend to lead the way in terms of fashion.
B. Their
population has ceased to expand.
C. They
reached their peak in the second half of the twentieth century.
D. 50
per cent of the world’s inhabitants now live in them
E. They
grew rich on the profits from manufacturing industry.
F.
Their success begins to work
against them at a certain stage.
G.
It is no longer automatically advantageous
to base a company there.
Questions
4 – 6
Choose
THREE letters A – G
Write
your answers in boxes 4 – 6 on your answer sheet.
The
list below gives some possible reasons why small towns can turn into successful
Second Cities. Which THREE of these
reasons are mentioned by the writer of the text?
Questions
7 – 13
Complete the summary using the list of words A –
R below.
Write the correct letter, A – R, in boxes 7 –
13 on your answer sheet.
It is becoming
increasingly obvious that large numbers of (7)______ are giving up their
expensive premises in the megacities and relocating to smaller cities like Montpellier.
One of the attractions of Montpellier is the presence of a good (8)______ that
can provide them with the necessary skilled workforce.
Another important
factor for Montpellier was the arrival of visitors from the (9)______. The introduction
of the (10)______ meant that increasing numbers were able to come for short
stays. Of these, a significant proportion decided to get a base in the city. The
city council soon realised that they needed to provide appropriate (11)______
for their new inhabitants. In fact, the (12)______ among them liked the more
relaxed lifestyle so much that they took advantage of any (13)______
arrangements offered by their firms to spend more of the week in Montpellier.
ANSWER KEY
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