Urban Growth in a LIC or NEE City
Case Study: Mumbai, India — An Introduction
Mumbai (Maharashtra state, western India) is the financial capital of India and one of the world's largest cities. It provides a detailed case study of rapid urban growth in an NEE, illustrating both the immense economic opportunities that cities in emerging economies offer and the extreme challenges of managing explosive population growth.
Key facts:
| Fact | Data |
|---|---|
| City population | Approximately 21 million (Greater Mumbai Metropolitan Region: ~23 million) |
| Rank | Seventh-largest megacity in the world |
| Economic output | Contributes approximately 6% of India's GDP and 25% of India's industrial output |
| Area | The old city occupies a narrow peninsula — a geographic constraint that has driven extreme density |
| Population density | Over 20,000 people per km² in central areas; Dharavi slum: estimated 240,000–1 million per km² |
India's urban context (extra context — beyond AQA 8035 spec): India's urban population has grown from 290 million (2001) to approximately 500 million (2024). Cities like Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru, and Chennai are growing rapidly as millions migrate from rural Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, and other states in search of employment.
Causes of Mumbai's Rapid Growth
Mumbai's growth is driven by the same push-pull dynamic discussed in urban trends, operating at a very large scale within India's context.
Push factors driving rural-to-urban migration to Mumbai:
- Agricultural poverty in states such as Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, and Rajasthan — small farm sizes, low incomes, seasonal unemployment
- Drought and crop failure in Maharashtra's own hinterland; climate variability has worsened seasonal insecurity
- Lack of schools, hospitals, and infrastructure in rural villages
- Caste discrimination in some rural areas limits employment opportunities for lower-caste individuals (extra context — beyond AQA 8035 spec)
Pull factors drawing migrants to Mumbai:
- India's Bollywood film industry (the world's most prolific film industry by output) based in Mumbai employs hundreds of thousands and attracts aspiring performers
- Financial services and stock exchange: Dalal Street (Bombay Stock Exchange); international banks; insurance and corporate headquarters
- Port and manufacturing: Mumbai's natural harbour is one of Asia's most important; textiles, chemicals, and engineering industries
- Information technology and services: BPO (business process outsourcing) and IT services have grown rapidly since the 1990s
- Established migrant communities from specific regions create social networks that attract further migration
Natural increase: Mumbai has a relatively high birth rate and a declining death rate — natural increase within the city adds to its population alongside in-migration.
Opportunities in Mumbai
Despite its challenges, Mumbai offers genuine social and economic opportunities that explain why millions continue to migrate there.
Economic opportunities:
| Sector | Detail |
|---|---|
| Formal employment | Banking, finance, IT services, media, manufacturing — provide middle-class wages and career progression |
| Informal economy | Street trading, domestic work, recycling (Dharavi processes 80% of Mumbai's recyclable plastic), small manufacturing in slums — provides income without formal qualifications or registration |
| Entrepreneurship | Dharavi is estimated to have a $1 billion annual economic output; its entrepreneurs make goods sold worldwide |
| Remittances (extra context — beyond AQA 8035 spec) | Migrants send money home, raising living standards of rural families and channelling investment into source villages |
Social opportunities:
- Education: access to schools and universities — many migrants' primary motivation; literacy rates in Mumbai are higher than in source states
- Healthcare: hospitals and clinics (though severely overburdened); health outcomes in Mumbai are generally better than rural Bihar or UP
- Water supply: even informal settlements with communal standpipes have more reliable access to treated water than many rural villages, where the only source may be an open well shared by the whole community
- Energy: the urban electricity grid reaches most of the city; even illegal connections mean slum residents often have access to power for lighting, fans, and mobile phone charging — unavailable in many remote rural areas
- Social mobility: the city's anonymity and formal/informal economy offer opportunities to escape discrimination based on background
- Cultural life: Bollywood, cricket, festivals, arts — a richness of cultural experience unavailable in rural areas
Challenges: Housing, Health and Water
Mumbai faces severe challenges arising directly from its rapid growth — particularly the inability of infrastructure to keep pace with population.
Housing — Dharavi:
- Dharavi, in the heart of central Mumbai, is Asia's largest informal settlement, housing approximately 600,000–1 million people in approximately 2.1 km²
- Homes are built without planning permission; structures are typically one or two storeys of brick, wood, and corrugated metal
- Average living space per person: approximately 4 m² (compare UK minimum of ~14 m² per person)
- Most structures lack running water; communal tap points serve hundreds of families
- However, Dharavi is not merely a slum: it has a dense internal economy, schools, temples, and strong community identity — community-led organisations provide some services the city government does not
Health:
- Overcrowding enables rapid spread of infectious diseases (tuberculosis is endemic in high-density slums; COVID-19 hit Dharavi severely in 2020)
- Air pollution from industry, vehicles, and cooking fires on open stoves causes high rates of respiratory disease
- Poor sanitation — most of Dharavi's residents share communal toilets (approximately 1 toilet per 1,440 people in some blocks)
Water supply:
- The formal water supply serves approximately 70% of Mumbai's population; the remaining 30% (mostly in informal settlements) depend on water vendors or standpipes
- Mumbai's water is drawn from reservoirs in the Western Ghats; capacity is stretched by population growth and leakage (estimated 25–30% system losses)
- During the dry season (November–May), water is rationed; many families receive supply for only a few hours per day
Something not quite clicking?
Ask Aica to explain any part of this differently. Free, takes 30 seconds.
Challenges: Energy, Traffic and Sewage
Energy:
- Load shedding (rolling power cuts) affects large areas of Mumbai — the electricity grid cannot meet peak demand
- Many informal settlement homes are illegally connected to the grid ("electricity theft"); others use kerosene, wood, or diesel generators
- Air pollution from unclean cooking fuels contributes significantly to indoor air quality problems
Traffic and transport:
- Mumbai's road network is congested severely — the average speed on Mumbai's roads during peak hours is approximately 10–15 km/h
- The Western Railway and Central Railway carry approximately 7.5 million passengers per day on suburban train lines — among the world's highest passenger densities; trains are notoriously overcrowded (3× design capacity during peaks)
- Over 30 people die annually in falls from overcrowded trains
Sewage and waste:
- Approximately 60% of sewage in Mumbai is treated; the remainder flows untreated into rivers (Ulhas, Mithi) and ultimately into the harbour and coastal sea
- The Mithi River, which flows through central Mumbai, is heavily polluted with sewage, industrial effluent, and solid waste
- During the monsoon season (June–September), the combination of extreme rainfall, blocked drains, and unmanaged waste causes severe annual flooding
Unemployment and crime:
- The formal economy cannot absorb the volume of migrants arriving; many are confined to the informal sector (estimated 50–65% of Mumbai's workforce), which provides unstable income with no employment protections, no sick pay, and no pension
- Youth unemployment is high among recent arrivals with limited skills; competition for informal work is intense
- Organised crime networks (the Mumbai underworld) have historically exerted control over some informal economies including construction and market trading; extortion and protection rackets affect small businesses in slum areas
- Crime rates in overcrowded informal settlements are higher than in wealthier districts; petty theft and interpersonal violence linked to overcrowding, competition for resources, and substance abuse are persistent challenges
Urban Planning to Improve Quality of Life
The Dharavi Redevelopment Project: The Maharashtra state government proposed the Dharavi Redevelopment Project to replace informal housing with high-rise residential towers:
- Residents in structures built before 2000 are entitled to free apartments of 35 m² in new buildings (later revised to 27 m²)
- Remaining land is sold to private developers for commercial and residential development to fund the scheme
- Critics argue: 35/27 m² apartments cannot accommodate the extended families and small enterprises that define Dharavi's social and economic fabric; the scheme has been delayed for over 20 years due to legal challenges and community opposition; there is concern that many residents will be moved to the urban periphery, far from their livelihoods
Mumbai's metro system: Mumbai's metro expansion (Metro Line 1 opened 2014; Lines 2, 7, and further lines under construction as of 2024) aims to relieve pressure on the suburban rail network and reduce road congestion:
- Long-term plan: 337 km metro network with 12+ lines
- Expected to reduce car journeys, cut air pollution, and improve commute times for millions of residents
The Dharavi Toilet Block Programme (NGO-led): SPARC (Society for the Promotion of Area Resource Centres) and Mahila Milan (a women's collective) built community toilet blocks across Mumbai slums with community participation in design and management — a more successful approach than government-imposed infrastructure, as communities maintain the facilities they have co-designed.
Common Exam Mistakes
1. Describing challenges only — ignoring opportunities
Mumbai questions frequently ask for "opportunities AND challenges" or ask students to evaluate whether the opportunities outweigh the challenges. If you write only about the problems, you miss half the question. Mumbai offers real, named opportunities: Bollywood, financial services, Dharavi's billion-dollar economy, access to education.
2. Using vague language about slums
"People live in bad housing" earns minimal marks. "Dharavi residents have approximately 4 m² of living space per person, share communal toilets (1 per 1,440 people in some areas), and have limited access to clean running water" demonstrates specific, located knowledge that earns higher marks.
3. Ignoring planning solutions
Every AQA urban case study question includes a dimension on planning to improve quality of life. The Dharavi Redevelopment Project, metro expansion, and NGO toilet-block programmes are all relevant. These responses show you understand both the problem and the attempted solutions.
4. Treating Mumbai as a single uniform city
Mumbai contains extreme wealth (Antilia — the most expensive private residence in the world, owned by Mukesh Ambani, is in Mumbai) alongside extreme poverty. The city's residents experience very different conditions depending on whether they live in formal housing or an informal settlement. Show this contrast in your answer.
5. Confusing push factors with challenges
Push factors are what drove people to Mumbai from the countryside (agricultural poverty, lack of services). Challenges are what they encounter in the city (overcrowding, poor sanitation). These are related but distinct parts of an answer about a LIC/NEE city case study.
Generate revision on any topic you study
Type any topic you're studying and Aicademy generates a complete lesson, quiz, and flashcard set — personalised to your level.
Lessons on anything
Structured, level-matched lessons on any topic you study
Practice quizzes
Find out what you actually know before the exam does
Flashcard sets
Lock in key concepts with instant revision cards
Ask Aica
Stuck on something? Get a clear explanation, any time
Urban Change in the UK
Urban Sustainability: Planning for the Future
Related lessons
6 Slides