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Book review: China's Urban Billion, by Tom Miller

This is a lively and readable book about one of the biggest challenges for the mainland's rulers over the next 20 years: how to build well-planned and affordable cities for the one billion people who will live in them by 2030?

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Over the past 30 years, China's urban population has increased by 500 million and it is planning to add another 300 million by 2030. Photo: AFP


by Tom Miller
Zed Books

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This is a lively and readable book about one of the biggest challenges for the mainland's rulers over the next 20 years: how to build well-planned and affordable cities for the one billion people who will live in them by 2030? How to avoid the giant slums full of drugs, crime and unemployment in many countries of the developing world?

Over the past 30 years, China's urban population has increased by 500 million and it is planning to add another 300 million by 2030, meaning one in every eight people on earth will live in a mainland city. It is the biggest and fastest urbanisation in human history.

Tom Miller is managing editor of the , and a former Beijing correspondent of the . He has lived in Beijing for more than a decade. This is his first book.

"Since 1978, China's leaders have made all the necessary changes to ensure that the country's economic growth machine kept purring along. It is now time to make some more … the present model cannot continue," Miller writes. "Its leaders must find a healthier, more inclusive and, ultimately, sustainable model of urban development."

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Two chapters on two core issues stand out: land ownership and the (registration) system.

"Individual farmers must be given effective ownership of their land," argues Miller. This is their most important asset; allowing them to sell or trade it is the best way to transfer wealth to them.

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