Introduction To Regional Planning
Introduction To Regional Planning
1. INTRODUCTION 2
2. AIM OF REGIONAL PLANNING 2
3. PRINCIPLES OF REGIONAL PLANNING 3
4. APPROACHES TO REGIONAL PLANNING 3
5. REGIONAL DISPARITIES 5
6. TYPES OF REGIONAL PLANNING 6
7. DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES IN REGIONAL PLANNING 6
8. SUMMARY 9
1. INTRODUCTION
Regional planning is a branch of land use planning and deals with the
efficient placement of land use activities, infrastructure and settlement growth
across a significantly larger area of land than an individual city or town.
Regional planning addresses problems of economic, social and political
transformations at geographical scales greater than a municipality, state or even
country. The region is connected and united by cultural identity, economic
interests, geographic features, as well as common developmental and
environmental concerns. Since the independence, the need for regional planning
has arisen from changing social and economic phenomena affecting local
communities and regions throughout the country.
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backward regions, per capita income will increase and the incentive to migrate to
prosperous regions will decline. This will also be the advantage to the prosperous
region in long run.
5. REGIONAL DISPARITIES
Regional inequalities existed in all countries at all times and it will be
ridiculous to expect that they can be abolished altogether. Complete equality
among regions is not possible because resources and human skills are unevenly
distributed over the different regions of a country and mobility of factors is
imperfect. Thus, even in USA, there is a vast underdeveloped area known as
Appalachia, characterized by rural poverty. In Canada, the maritime provinces,
southern part of Italy, northern part of Sweden, large areas in Scotland and Wales
of UK, western area of France, northern regions of Finland and Norway: have all
lagged considerably behind in the race of development and are designated
‘problem areas’. Because of the widespread poverty and below- subsistence level
of existence of the vast majority of people in many backward regions in the
underdeveloped countries, the task is twofold: (1) reduction of regional disparities,
and (2) ensuring at least a minimum level of subsistence to majority of people
inhabiting the backward areas and living below the level of subsistence.
If we take example of India, we can say that the states like Maharashtra,
Tamil Nadu, West Bengal which are considered to be industrial states, do not have
all their areas developed, instead, there majority of areas are backward areas. The
objective of ‘removal of regional inequalities’ should be re-formulated in the
Indian context as follows:
• Reducing disparities among states
• Reducing inequalities among different areas of the same state in such a way
that all the inhabitants are ensured a certain minimum level of subsistence.
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advanced with high per capita income, and high level of services available to the
people. The second situation is that developing countries with low rate of growth,
less than adequate level of services which neverthless one being increased by
means of appropriate development programmes. In the former case the
development strategy, if we may continue to call it development is concerned with
sustaining the present high level of growth in the future also and if necessary even
bringing down, the high level to level at which the resources of the country would
sustain it on a long term basis. In the latter case, namely the developing countries it
is the husbanding of the resources and their exploitation so as to make it possible to
reach a higher rate of economy growth.
2) Human Resource
The economic growth possibilities are greatly depends upon the human
resources in each region, their present level of capability, equipment and talent and
the readiness with which they can be drawn into the programs of accelerated
economic development. It is not usual that in the underdeveloped areas, the
manpower is very much unprepared for the development task which they have to
undertake to achieve rapid growth. This is owing to the migration in the past of
talented people to devaluated areas impoverishing the man power in that region
and more seriously lack of attention to the development of man power. Therefore
manpower development will be the one the key tasks which will determine the
successes or otherwise the regional development strategies.
In dealing with such manpower planning and developing, it will be
necessary to recognize the constraints which the cultural milieu of that area
imposes on its developments. A hasty imposition of manpower training programs
not geared to those areas specially may tend to break down the traditional and long
standing economic and social fabric in those areas and thereby render the human
resources incapable of either adopting the traditional pattern or accepting the new
pattern with any efficiency or effort. The great sensitivity with which manpower
planning and development is developed will largely determine the success of the
regional development program. Thus the development of appropriate manpower
and skills with indigenous resources will be a crucial aspect of development
strategy.
3) Natural Resources endowment
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The level of development of any specific region is largely dependent on its
resources endowment in terms of cultivable land, forests, water, minerals and so
on. The distribution of this resources are not uniform specially in a large regions
which are poorly endowed and regions which are richly endowed in degree of
endowments the populations in these region can also be rich or poor.
4) Infrastructure
Once the economic growth rate is stipulated, a programme for manpower
development is evolved and the needed natural endowment is secured through the
process of regionalization, the next step in the regional development strategy is to
consider infrastructure development within each region. By infrastructure we mean
here not merely water, power and transportation requirement but also more
important component of the settlement system which serves the need of economic
developmental activates and at the same time makes it possible to achieve better
social well, energy and transportation requirement and largely governed by the
pattern of economic activity envisaged in each region and the infrastructure
support which they need.
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8. SUMMARY
It has been brought out that major of the existing approaches are largely
meant for industrialized and urbanized societies. So, this urban-industrial bias
should be corrected to suit the rural and agricultural context of developing
societies, else planning won’t be able to reach its goals.
The old concept of a region being a physical geographical area and having a
fixed boundary appears to have given way to more flexible and realistic way of
looking at the issue.
Regional planning must become a tool for generating rural employment and
removing poverty, among the marginalized people in both rural and urban areas,
not only for the few who have wealth.
The main problem is not the lack of resources but their optimum utilization.
The lack of competent people to manage planning and development processes at
lower territorial levels is very acute. The skill with the masses is not available in
those backward regions.
REFERENCES
1. Chand M. & Puri V.K.(1995),”Regional Planning in India”, Allied
Publishers Limited, New Delhi
2. Misra P.R., Urs D.V. & Natraj V.K.(1979),”Regional Planning & National
Development”, Vikas Publishing House, New Delhi
3. planningcomission.nic.in