Kenya’s secondary cities growth strategy at a crossroads: Which way forward?

Type Journal Article - GeoJournal
Title Kenya’s secondary cities growth strategy at a crossroads: Which way forward?
Author(s)
Volume 62
Issue 1-2
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2005
Page numbers 117-128
URL https://www.researchgate.net/publication/226753525_Kenya's_Secondary_Cities_Growth_Strategy_at_a_Cro​ssroads_Which_Way_Forward
Abstract
Kenya has been promoting equitable urban and regional development since the 1970s despite the lack of a clearly
formulated national urban policy or an urban and regional development policy. A key element of the country’s
equitable urban and regional development effort is the promotion of secondary cities that would relieve population
pressure in the countryside, help to better integrate the country’s rural and urban economies, help to reduce
congestion and improve the quality of life in the metropolitan cities of Nairobi and Mombasa, and help increase the
modernization spin-off which urban centers provide to the surrounding rural areas. Using recent census and
economic survey data, this paper examines the current state of Kenya’s secondary cities in the context of its urban
and regional development strategies. The paper finds that: (1) the country’s urban and regional development
strategies have failed to work as planned largely because of insufficient devolution of power and fiscal responsibility
to municipal and other local government units, (2) the country’s secondary cities are faced with immense challenges
that undermine their ability to live up to expectations, (3) some of these cities have significantly grown economically
over the last four decades despite immense challenges, and (4) Nairobi’s dominance of Kenya’s economy continues
because of policies that unwittingly concentrate investments there. The paper concludes with strategies that could
enhance the country’s urban and regional development programs and, in the process, aid the development of its
secondary cities.

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