World Bank: Pakistan is 88% Urbanized

The World Bank researchers have recently concluded that 88 per cent live in urban areas. Their conclusion is based on satellite imagery and the Degree of Urbanization (DoU) methodology. The official Pakistani figures released by the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS) put the current level of urbanization at 39%. The source of this massive discrepancy is the government's reliance on administrative boundaries rather than population density and settlement patterns, according to the World Bank working research paper titled  "When Does a Village Become a Town?". 

Urbanization in Pakistan. Source: World Bank

Urban areas are characterized by high population density, while rural areas are sparsely populated with more open space. Major differences include urban areas having more commercial development, diverse job opportunities, and a faster pace of life, while rural areas often focus on agriculture and have a slower pace of life with closer-knit communities but may face challenges with limited access to services. 

The World Bank’s Paper suggests that secondary cities and peri-urban areas — rather than megacities — are the primary drivers of recent urban expansion which are systematically overlooked in official Pakistani classifications. This discrepancy between functional and administrative classifications has significant fiscal and planning implications.

Pakistan's official data grossly underestimates urbanization, with Islamabad showing only 47% urban population compared to 90% under the DoU, while figures in Balochistan, Punjab, and Sindh are more closely aligned. In Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, the DoU estimates the urban population at nearly three times the official 15%, while Islamabad is mostly dense urban, and other provinces show mixed suburban and peri-urban growth. The report finds that Pakistan’s urban landscape has transformed dramatically over the past two decades. Since the early 2000s, a growing share of the rural population has left agriculture, transforming previously rural settlements into new and vibrant urban centers. Unlike Afghanistan, India and sub-Saharan Africa, the agriculture sector is no longer the top employer in Pakistan. Services sector is now the top employment sector in the country.

Top Employment Sector in Each Country. Source: Visual Capitalist

The policy research paper finds that misclassified areas reduce property tax revenues and undermine the planning and provision of critical public services. It also distorts spatial socioeconomic indicators, masking the true extent of urban-rural disparities and complicating the design of effective, evidence-based public policy.

Urbanization Comparison of Developing Nations Based on DoU Method

The DoU method facilitates cross-national comparisons, as it provides a consistent criteria. Application of the DoU reveals that, despite variation across urban typologies, the proportion of the population residing in urban areas exceeds 70 percent in all examined countries. The list (fig 2) includes Brazil and Pakistan (98% each). Bangladesh (79%), Egypt (83%), India (77%) and Mexico (82%).

The paper finds that Pakistan is among only a minority of countries that use purely administrative definitions to identify urban areas. Changing how the country determines urban areas to include population density, service access, and other urban characteristics will allow it, as the DoU shows, to account for a varied urban landscape. Recognizing the existence of areas between dense cities and rural villages can help to establish a staggered expansion of the areas subject to property taxes. Updating the urban classification could increase property taxes sevenfold, and new technologies can help modernize cadaster systems. Besides supporting the reclassification of what areas are urban, satellite data offers additional possibilities to identify properties and update the cadasters.

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Views: 37

Comment by Riaz Haq 4 hours ago

@SushantSin

But middle class is getting low inflation.

https://x.com/sushantsin/status/2004783966528962574?s=61&t=mgTx...

———-


Floods, low crop prices leave Indian farm­ers under stress

Mar­ket prices of key crops fell below MSP, squeez­ing farmer incomes severely across regions



https://www.livemint.com/economy/india-farmers-agrarian-distress-mi...


India struggled to pro­tect farm­ers as the coun­try’s agrarian dis­tress worsened in 2025. Severe mon­soon rains caused dev­ast­at­ing floods in Pun­jab, inund­at­ing 200,000 hec­tares of farm­land, besides dam­aging crops in Hary­ana and Maha­rashtra, not­ably the Marath­wada region. As a res­ult, farm­ers faced a loss of income and soil dam­age and sought bet­ter com­pens­a­tion and long-term sup­port.

If that was not enough, lower mar­ket prices for their pro­duce fur­ther eroded their income. Prices for sev­eral key com­mod­it­ies slipped below the min­imum sup­port price (MSP), at which the gov­ern­ment pro­cures pro­duce from farm­ers. While the broader mac­roe­co­nomic envir­on­ment benefited from low food infla­tion, the decline in farmg­ate prices raised ser­i­ous con­cerns about rural incomes and the over­all sta­bil­ity of the agri­cul­tural eco­nomy.

Low infla­tion can adversely affect rural incomes if farm­ers are forced to sell below the bench­mark pro­cure­ment price. The prices of grains, most pulses and oil seeds such as soy­bean, ground­nut and sun­flower are cur­rently below their MSP.

Defla­tion in whole­sale crop prices pulled con­sumer infla­tion down to a record low of 0.25% in Octo­ber (year on year). Food prices, which account for about 40% of the con­sumer bas­ket, fell 5% from a dip of 2.3% in Septem­ber. The devel­op­ment assumes sig­ni­fic­ance given that about 42% of India’s 1.4 bil­lion pop­u­la­tion depends on agri­cul­ture for live­li­hood. The sec­tor accoun­ted for 18% of India's GDP in FY24.

The Centre is work­ing on a con­tin­gency plan to pre­vent dis­tress sales dur­ing the pro­cure­ment sea­son, when crop prices slipped below MSP in many states, Mint repor­ted on 24 Octo­ber.

Offi­cials from the agri­cul­ture min­istry, depart­ment of food and pub­lic dis­tri­bu­tion and Niti Aayog dis­cussed rais­ing pro­cure­ment to pro­tect farmer incomes, fol­low­ing the steep dis­in­fla­tion in pulses and oil­seeds prices this year, which came after a surge in FY24. Besides assured pro­cure­ment at MSP, the plan was to include sup­port­ive meas­ures like facil­it­at­ing export of pro­duce to over­seas mar­kets and cov­er­ing part of the losses due to the price slump.

Tak­ing a step in this dir­ec­tion, the gov­ern­ment, under the pulses mis­sion, announced 100% pro­cure­ment of tur, urad and masoor at MSP for four years. The prime min­is­ter launched the Mis­sion for Aat­manirbharta in Pulses (FY26 to FY31) with a budget­ary alloc­a­tion of ₹11,440 crore

on 11 Octo­ber. It aims to ensure 100% pro­cure­ment of these pulses at MSP, besides increas­ing their cul­tiv­a­tion area and pro­duc­tion.

The gov­ern­ment approved con­tinu­ation of the Pra­dhan Man­tri Annadata Aay San­rak­shan Abhiyan (PM-AASHA) to FY26. The scheme enables pro­cure­ment of oil­seeds at MSP by cent­ral agen­cies includ­ing the National Agri­cul­tural Cooper­at­ive Mar­ket­ing Fed­er­a­tion of India Ltd. (Nafed) and the National Cooper­at­ive Con­sumers' Fed­er­a­tion of India Ltd (NCCF).

Ana­lysts are of the view that with enhanced pro­cure­ment and buf­fer­stock build­ing, the gov­ern­ment is tak­ing steps to pre­vent dis­tress sales. However, these are still not suf­fi­cient.

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