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Counterurbanization
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Counterurbanization, ruralization, or deurbanization is a demographic and social process in which people move from urban areas to rural areas. It, as suburbanization, is inversely related to urbanization, and first occurs as a reaction to inner-city deprivation.[1] Recent research has documented the social and political drivers of counterurbanization and its impacts in China and other developing countries which are undergoing a process of mass urbanization.[2] Counterurbanization is one of the causes that can lead to shrinking cities.
While counterurbanization manifests differently across the world, all forms revolve around the central idea of migration movement from a populated location to a less populated location. Clare J.A. Mitchell, an associate professor in the Department of Geography at the University of Waterloo, argues that in Europe, counterurbanization involves a type of migration leading to deconcentration of one area to another that is beyond suburbanization or metro decentralization. Mitchell categorizes counterurbanization into three sub-types: ex-urbanization, displaced-urbanization, and anti-urbanization.[3]
Causes
[edit]The examples and perspective in this section deal primarily with the United States, Russia, and China and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject. (December 2019) |
Counterurbanization is the process by which people migrate from urban to rural communities, the opposite of urbanization. People have moved from urban to rural communities for various reasons, including job opportunities and simpler lifestyles. In recent years, due to technology, the urbanization process has been occurring in reverse. With new communications technology, people from rural communities can remote work because they can connect with each other via rural Internet, which means some employment opportunities no longer require moving to an urban community.[4] Counterurbanization is about people being able to explore alternatives to living in the city, creating changes in living location preferences.[5]
In past years, a multi-corporation business would use outsourcing by hiring workers in poorer countries for cheap labor. In more recent years, corporations have been using "rural sourcing" which involves using small to medium-sized town as a source of labor. This creates jobs in the country and also for rural communities so they do not need to move their entire family to a whole new setting and also reduces unnecessary expense for the companies. Most of the workers in these rural settings get paid less but have an option of either working from home or an office. If they were in an urban setting, the company would spend more money on an entirely new office for the urban-based employees to work at.[4]
In the past, the general migration trend in the United States has been from the east to the west. Art Hall, an executive director of the Centre for Applied Economics at the University of Kansas School of Business states "California has been losing people for at least a decade ... two patterns of migration are under way in California. People are leaving the coast and moving to the Northern interior. When they leave, they tend to go to places like Arizona and Nevada. So it's not a far move. And they also are going up north to Seattle and Portland. Part of the answer there is that it's just very expensive to live on the California coast."[6]
According to Hall, people have been influenced to move because of factors like climate, jobs, and tax rates. Hall also found that people who are not a part of a more stable family will tend to move more.[6] People choosing to live in rural areas have found it more beneficial because of cleaner air, peace and quiet, and plentiful space. Smaller towns have also been proven to be convenient for the inhabitants.[4]
The factors spurring migration from larger localities to smaller ones vary by country and region. In the case of Russia, counterurbanization has been relatively limited since jobs have not always moved to rural areas to accommodate those who want to leave the city. Rather, people find themselves having two homes, one in the city during workdays and one in rural areas for days off. There is a weak infrastructure outside of cities to accommodate people who wish to completely relocate. In 2010, it was found that two-thirds of small towns are depressed, meaning that it has a large working-age population that is unemployed, and businesses are not profitable.[5]
Clare J.A. Mitchell believes the phenomenon of counterurbanization to be reflective of values and ideology in people's preferred living style thus taking into consideration not only distances traveled from the urban area but the motivations. Mitchell uses the term "ex-urbanization" that is used in reference to the phenomenon that people reside in the outside perimeters of an urban city but remain closely involved through their social networks and jobs, and the term "ex-urbanites" in reference to those people. Ex-urbanites typically still enjoy the benefits of modern infrastructure. Another term concerning differing motives for traveling or moving away from the city is people who are forced out of the city due to factors such as: the inability to find work, the increased cost of living, or dissatisfaction and/or conflicts with the culture of urban society. This phenomenon is "displaced-urbanization". Finally, there are those who participate in "anti-urbanization". Typically these people are motivated by a sort of rejection concerning the urban lifestyle and consumer culture. Anti-urbanization is an escape for those to choose to leave and forgo the lifestyle and culture of the city. The decisive decision to move away from the city for this type of counterurbanization is usually a step toward spiritual growth and rejection of materialism.[3][7] A 2004 study of 4.4 million Swedish residents found that people who live in cities have a 20% increased chance of developing depression.[8][dubious – discuss]
Political factors may also lead to anti-urbanization. In China, during the "Cultural Revolution" in 1966–1976, urbanization stagnated, and a nationwide anti-urbanization started, which was manifested by a massive "Down to the Countryside Movement". Intellectuals and officials were persecuted and removed to rural areas. It is estimated that during the peak period of "Down to the Countryside Movement" at the end of the 1960s, more than 10 million people moved from urban China to rural areas, while the total urban population in China was 168 million in 1968. This anti-urbanization process was fundamentally different from counterurbanization as seen in developed countries, as it resulted from a far-left communist ideology.[9]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Berry, Brian J.L. (1980). "Urbanization and Counterurbanization in the United States". The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 451: 13–20. doi:10.1177/000271628045100103. S2CID 145710851. Archived from the original on 2008-09-24. Retrieved 2009-05-01.
- ^ Griffiths, Michael B.; Chapman, Malcolm; Christiansen, Flemming (2010). "Chinese consumers: The Romantic reappraisal". Ethnography. 11 (3): 331–357. doi:10.1177/1466138110370412. S2CID 144152261.
- ^ a b Mitchell, Clare J.A (2004). "Making sense of counterurbanization". Journal of Rural Studies. 20 (1): 15–34. Bibcode:2004JRurS..20...15M. doi:10.1016/S0743-0167(03)00031-7.
- ^ a b c University of Kansas (September 25, 2009). "Study Uncovers 'De-urbanization' Of America". Science Daily.
- ^ a b Nefedova, T.G. (May 2016). "Urbanization, Counterurbanization, and Rural-Urban Communities Facing Growing Horizontal Mobility". Sociological Research. 55 (3): 195. doi:10.1080/10610154.2016.1245570. S2CID 152201869.
- ^ a b "Study uncovers 'de-urbanization' of America (w/ Video)". Phys.org. 2009-09-24.
- ^ Nefedova, T.G.; Pokrovskii, N.E.; Treivish, A.I. (2016). "Urbanization, Counterurbanization, and Rural-Urban Communities Facing Growing Horizontal Mobility". Sociological Research. 55 (3): 195–210. doi:10.1080/10610154.2016.1245570. S2CID 152201869.
- ^ Rautio, Nina; Filatova, Svetlana; Lehtiniemi, Heli; Miettunen, Jouko (February 2018). "Living environment and its relationship to depressive mood: A systematic review". International Journal of Social Psychiatry. 64 (1): 92–103. doi:10.1177/0020764017744582. ISSN 0020-7640. PMID 29212385.
- ^ 许学强 (Xu Xueqiang); 周一星 (Zhou Yixing); 宁越敏 (Ning Yuemin) (2009). "第五章 城市化的历史进程 第三节 当代中国城市化的进程". 城市地理学 [Urban Geography] (in Chinese (China)) (2nd ed.). 高等教育出版社 (Higher Education Press). pp. 108–109. ISBN 978-7-04-025539-3.
External links
[edit]Counterurbanization
View on GrokipediaDefinition and Conceptual Framework
Core Definition
Counterurbanization denotes the demographic process of net population movement from larger urban centers to smaller towns, villages, and rural areas within a national settlement hierarchy, leading to faster growth rates in nonmetropolitan regions compared to metropolitan ones.[3] This redistribution typically manifests as deconcentration, where population densities decrease in core cities while increasing in peripheral locales, driven primarily by voluntary migration rather than forced displacement.[6] Empirical measurement often relies on settlement system levels, with counterurbanization identified when inflows exceed outflows from higher-order (urban) to lower-order (rural or small-town) nodes, as observed in advanced economies since the mid-20th century.[3][5] The phenomenon encompasses not only residential shifts but also associated economic activities, such as remote work or small-scale enterprises relocating to less congested areas, though it remains distinct from broader rural revival by emphasizing urban-to-rural flows over endogenous rural growth.[7] Data from Western Europe and North America indicate that counterurbanization correlates with improved infrastructure in rural zones, enabling urban-like amenities without metropolitan densities; for instance, between 1970 and 2000, nonmetropolitan U.S. counties grew by 20-30% faster than urban counterparts in select regions due to such patterns.[8] Scholarly analyses caution that while migration dominates, natural population changes and reclassification of areas can amplify observed trends, necessitating hierarchical or density-based metrics for accurate delineation.[6][7]Distinctions from Related Migration Patterns
Counterurbanization represents a reversal of urbanization, the latter characterized by net population inflows from rural to urban areas that correlate positively with settlement size and foster metropolitan expansion.[9] In urbanization, typically observed in developing economies, rural migrants seek urban employment and services, resulting in city population growth rates exceeding national averages.[10] Counterurbanization, by contrast, features a negative correlation between net migration and settlement size, with outflows from larger urban centers to smaller towns or rural locales, often deconcentrating population in advanced economies.[9] Unlike suburbanization, which entails outward expansion from urban cores to adjacent peri-urban rings within the same metropolitan area—supported historically by infrastructure like highways and affordable housing in the post-World War II United States—counterurbanization extends migration beyond these commuter zones to non-metropolitan rural areas.[11][9] Suburbanization sustains metropolitan statistical areas through edge-city development, whereas counterurbanization contributes to core and suburban decline in some cases, reflecting a broader deconcentration process that revives rural demographics.[9] Counterurbanization also differs from exurbanization, a subset involving affluent households relocating just beyond suburban fringes to semi-rural estates, often reproducing urban lifestyles in low-density settings; while overlapping, counterurbanization encompasses wider downstream shifts along the urban hierarchy, including to remote countryside, rather than elite fringe enclaves.[11] It contrasts with gentrification, an intra-urban phenomenon where higher-income groups rehabilitate declining city neighborhoods, displacing lower-income residents without net out-migration from urban systems.[10] These patterns highlight counterurbanization's emphasis on hierarchical deconcentration over lateral moves between similar-sized places or intra-settlement restructuring.[9]Historical Development
Early Observations (Pre-1970s)
In Britain during the 19th century, amid rapid industrialization and net urbanization, significant counterurban flows were evident through individual lifetime migrations downward in the urban hierarchy. Analysis of residential histories from 16,091 individuals born between 1750 and 1930 demonstrated that a notable share of migrants relocated from larger cities to smaller towns or rural locales, often for economic reasons such as access to land or lower living costs, or to escape urban overcrowding and poor sanitation.[12] These movements, while overshadowed by overall population concentration in industrial centers, represented early deconcentration patterns that contemporary observers might have interpreted as temporary reversals rather than a sustained trend.[13] In the United States, pre-1970s demographic shifts were dominated by urbanization peaking around 1920 and subsequent suburbanization, with rural areas experiencing persistent net out-migration through the mid-20th century. However, selective in-migration to nonmetropolitan counties began appearing in census data from the 1950s and 1960s, particularly among retirees and families drawn to affordable housing and natural amenities in peripheral regions like the Ozarks or Appalachia.[14] U.S. Census analyses showed nonmetropolitan population growth slowing out-migration rates by the 1960s, with total nonmetropolitan population rising 13.3% over the decade—albeit trailing metropolitan gains at 16.6%—hinting at nascent turnaround dynamics driven by improved rural infrastructure and early automobile access.[14] European contexts similarly featured marginal pre-1970s observations of rural rebound, often tied to post-World War II recovery and agricultural modernization, which freed labor while urban industrial cores faced congestion. In Switzerland, for instance, selective deconcentration from cities over 30,000 inhabitants was noted in regional studies by the 1960s, though not yet termed counterurbanization.[15] These early signals, retrospective in modern scholarship, underscore that counterurban-like migrations occurred sporadically but lacked the scale or policy recognition that characterized later decades, remaining subordinate to dominant urbanizing forces.Expansion in Advanced Economies (1970s–2010s)
Counterurbanization gained prominence in the United States during the 1970s, marking a reversal from prior decades of net urban growth, as nonmetropolitan counties experienced faster population increases than metropolitan areas. Between April 1970 and July 1974, nonmetropolitan populations grew by 5.6 percent, outpacing metropolitan growth of approximately 3.4 percent, driven primarily by net in-migration to rural and exurban locales.[7][16] This shift added an average of 353,000 residents annually to nonmetropolitan areas from 1970 to 1973, contrasting with urban losses in some regions and signaling broader deconcentration trends.[17] The phenomenon extended to Western Europe by the mid-1970s, with multiple countries recording consistent net migration from urban cores to surrounding rural districts through the 1980s and 1990s. Nations including Denmark, France, Germany, Sweden, and Switzerland displayed sustained counterurbanization, characterized by urban population declines and growth in accessible countryside areas, as internal migration patterns shifted away from urbanization phases dominant in the 1950s and 1960s.[9][18] In Switzerland, for instance, deconcentration occurred at the cantonal level in the 1970s and at district levels in the 1980s and 1990s, reflecting spillover from suburbanization into more remote rural zones.[15] By the 1970s, most Western European countries evidenced this counterurban relationship between settlement size and net migration rates.[19] In Australia and other advanced economies, counterurbanization trends emerged alongside those in North America and Europe, persisting variably into the 2000s before some attenuation. Australian interest and documentation peaked from the 1970s to early 2000s, linked to lifestyle and amenity migrations offsetting long-term rural declines, though rural populations continued aging due to youth out-migration.[20] Across developed regions, the 1970s-2010s period saw counterurbanization expand as a recognized demographic process, with rural growth rates exceeding urban ones in select locales amid economic restructuring, though patterns moderated in the 1980s in places like the US and showed increasing deconcentration by the 1990s-2000s.[21][7] This era's expansion highlighted counterurbanization's role in redistributing populations toward less densely settled areas, influencing spatial planning and economic development.[1]Pandemic-Era Acceleration (2020s)
The COVID-19 pandemic, beginning in early 2020, catalyzed a marked uptick in counterurbanization across advanced economies, primarily through the rapid expansion of remote work capabilities and heightened aversion to urban density amid lockdowns and health risks. In the United States, net domestic migration to nonmetropolitan (rural) areas surged, with rural net migration rates reaching 0.47 percent in 2020–2021, a sharp rise from near-zero levels in 2017–2020. This shift contributed to population growth in rural America, where net in-migration offset natural decrease (excess of deaths over births) between April 2020 and July 2023, sustaining gains through 2024 as 65 percent of nonmetro counties recorded positive net migration from the 2020 census to June 2024. Major urban counties experienced outflows nearly twice the pre-pandemic rate even in 2023, with migration from counties exceeding one million residents remaining elevated due to persistent remote work arrangements. Internationally, similar patterns emerged, though varying in scale and duration. In Australia, regional areas saw a net population increase of 70,900 people from 2020–2021, contrasting with a decline of 26,000 in capital cities—the first such downturn since 1981—attributed to pandemic-induced preferences for space and lower density. European cases, such as in Spain and the United Kingdom, showed increased in-migration to rural municipalities near urban centers during 2020, particularly those with high second-home prevalence, alongside reduced out-migration from cities. In Sweden, counterurban moves were prominent among young families, reflecting return migration to hometowns facilitated by flexible employment. These trends aligned with global reinforcement of pre-existing counterurbanization in the global North, amplified by the pandemic's remote work surge, which stabilized at 35–40 percent of the workforce by late 2022 and enabled location decoupling from job sites. While initial 2020 peaks suggested potential for enduring reversal of urbanization, post-2022 data indicated partial stabilization rather than mass exodus, with some urban rebound via immigration but sustained rural gains through domestic shifts. Remote work's structural persistence—projected to grow further into the mid-2020s—continued underpinning these movements, though economic recovery and return-to-office mandates tempered the acceleration in select metros. Overall, the pandemic era marked a causal inflection point, where technological enablers intersected with immediate health and lifestyle pressures to expedite deconcentration from high-density cores.Causal Drivers
Economic Incentives
Lower housing costs in rural and peripheral areas constitute a primary economic incentive for counterurbanization, enabling migrants to secure more spacious accommodations or homeownership at reduced expense compared to urban centers. In the United States, median home values in rural counties remained substantially below those in metropolitan areas through 2023, with rural properties often priced 30-50% lower on average, reflecting disparities in land availability and demand pressures.[22] [23] This affordability gap allows urban expatriates to allocate savings toward investments or improved quality of life, particularly as urban housing markets faced escalating prices driven by limited supply and high-density constraints.[24] Beyond housing, broader cost-of-living differentials—encompassing utilities, groceries, and transportation—further incentivize relocation, with rural areas typically exhibiting indices 10-20% lower than urban counterparts due to reduced service sector markups and economies of scale in suburban sprawl.[25] [26] Urban economic pressures, such as stagnant wages relative to inflation in declining city sectors, exacerbate this push, prompting outflows from areas with high operational costs for businesses and households alike.[27] Empirical analyses confirm that these fiscal disparities, rather than amenity pulls alone, underpin much of the observed migration, as evidenced by pre-2020 patterns in advanced economies where counterurbanizers prioritized value arbitrage.[9] The rise of remote work has intensified these incentives by decoupling income from geographic proximity to employment hubs, permitting workers to capture urban-level salaries amid rural cost savings. By 2023, approximately 12-20% of U.S. workers engaged in full or hybrid remote arrangements, a sustained elevation from pre-pandemic levels of under 6%, correlating with accelerated out-migration from high-cost metros.[28] [29] Studies attribute this to remote work's role in enabling location-independent earnings, with potential teleworkers 1.5-2 times more likely to relocate to lower-cost regions, thereby amplifying counterurbanization's economic rationale.[30] [31] In contexts like the U.S. and Europe, this dynamic has reshaped labor markets, as migrants leverage digital infrastructure to bypass urban wage premiums eroded by living expenses.[32]Technological Facilitators
Advancements in information and communication technologies (ICTs), particularly high-speed broadband internet and remote collaboration tools, have enabled counterurbanization by severing the traditional linkage between workplace location and residential choice, allowing knowledge workers to relocate from urban centers while sustaining employment productivity.[30] This decoupling intensified during the COVID-19 pandemic, when remote work adoption surged from approximately 5% of U.S. workers pre-2020 to over 20% by mid-2021, correlating with increased out-migration to rural and exurban areas.[33] Empirical analyses indicate that regions with higher remote-work potential experienced elevated urban exodus rates among working-age populations, as digital infrastructure permitted seamless integration of rural living with urban job demands.[30] Broadband internet expansion has served as a foundational enabler, bridging the urban-rural digital divide and making dispersed living viable for remote professionals. In the United States, rural areas historically lagged with 39% lacking access to 25/4 Mbps broadband speeds as of 2018, compared to 4% in urban zones, but targeted deployments—such as fiber-optic rollouts and satellite services like Starlink—have progressively enhanced connectivity, supporting a 15-20% rise in rural remote work feasibility by 2023.[34] Studies in European contexts similarly show that improved broadband correlates with net population gains in peripheral regions, as it facilitates e-commerce, telehealth, and virtual education, reducing urban dependency for essential services.[35] Without such infrastructure, counterurbanization remains constrained, as evidenced by persistent migration barriers in low-connectivity rural locales.[36] Video conferencing and cloud-based platforms have further accelerated this trend by enabling real-time collaboration and data access independent of geography. Adoption of tools like Zoom and Microsoft Teams exploded post-2020, with global usage increasing over 300% in early pandemic months, allowing migrants to peripheral areas to participate in urban-centric meetings without commuting.[37] Cloud computing, underpinning these systems, provides scalable storage and processing—e.g., via AWS or Google Cloud—eliminating the need for on-site servers and empowering solo entrepreneurs or small teams in remote settings to handle complex tasks formerly urban-exclusive.[38] Regional case studies, such as in California's Central Valley, demonstrate how these technologies influenced housing relocations, with remote workers citing digital tools as key to sustaining Bay Area jobs from rural bases, thereby boosting local economies through inbound spending.[38]Social and Demographic Pressures
Counterurbanization is often propelled by social preferences for environments offering greater personal space, reduced density, and enhanced quality of life, as urban dwellers seek respite from congestion, noise, and interpersonal strains associated with city living. Surveys and migration studies indicate that migrants prioritize access to nature, lower crime rates, and stronger community ties, viewing rural or peri-urban areas as embodying a "rural idyll" conducive to well-being.[9][39] These preferences reflect a causal response to urban social pathologies, such as elevated stress levels documented in metropolitan settings, where population density correlates with higher incidences of mental health issues and social isolation despite superficial connectivity.[40] Demographic shifts, particularly among families with children, exert significant pressure toward counterurbanization, as households with young dependents migrate to secure larger homes and safer, family-oriented locales unavailable in high-cost urban cores. In Sweden, for instance, counterurban moves among parents aged 25-44 with children under 18 increased notably from 2010 to 2019, often representing internal return migration to ancestral rural regions for child-rearing advantages like proximity to extended family and outdoor amenities.[41] Similarly, during the COVID-19 pandemic, family units with minors drove a surge in such relocations across Europe and North America, motivated by heightened awareness of urban health risks and desires for self-sufficient lifestyles amid school disruptions and remote learning needs.[3] This pattern underscores a fertility-linked dynamic, where urban constraints on space and affordability discourage family expansion, prompting outflows to areas permitting larger households—evident in data showing counterurban migrants averaging 0.5-1 more children per family than urban stayers.[42] Retirees and older cohorts contribute demographically through selective migration to quieter locales, though this represents a smaller fraction compared to family-driven flows; in advanced economies, individuals over 55 cite preferences for low-maintenance properties and reduced urban pace, alleviating age-related vulnerabilities like mobility limitations in dense settings. U.S. Census data from 2010-2020 reveal net gains in non-metropolitan counties from this group, correlating with longer life expectancies and pension portability enabling such shifts.[6] However, these moves amplify rural aging profiles, as incoming seniors join existing elderly populations, straining local services without offsetting younger inflows unless coupled with family migrations. Overall, these social and demographic vectors interact with economic enablers, but empirical tracking via longitudinal surveys confirms lifestyle aspirations as primary, non-coerced motivators rather than mere necessities.[1]Policy and Institutional Factors
In advanced economies, rural development policies have increasingly incorporated incentives to attract urban migrants, aiming to counteract depopulation and stimulate local economies. For instance, Japan's government has implemented programs under the Rural Revitalization Strategy, offering subsidies for relocation, housing renovation, and entrepreneurial ventures in depopulated areas, which empirical studies link to increased urban-to-rural flows since the 2010s.[43] Similarly, South Korea's initiatives to "invent lively rural areas" include fiscal incentives and infrastructure investments to draw urban professionals, fostering counterurbanization as a deliberate policy outcome amid urban congestion and aging rural populations.[44] These measures often prioritize economic diversification, such as agritourism and remote work hubs, with evidence from regional case studies showing net population gains in targeted locales.[45] Regulatory frameworks also shape counterurbanization by influencing housing access and land use. In Ireland, planning regulations restrict rural one-off housing to applicants demonstrating social or economic ties to the area, such as family ownership or employment, thereby facilitating selective migration among returnees and those with pre-existing rural connections while limiting speculative urban inflows.[46] This governance approach, embedded in national development plans, has empirically steered counterurban patterns toward "familiar" relocators, as evidenced by household surveys and planning data from the 2010s onward. In the European context, the OECD's New Rural Paradigm promotes endogenous growth through local entrepreneurship policies, which in countries like Greece have amplified rural appeal during economic downturns by integrating counterurbanization into broader revitalization efforts.[39][47] In emerging economies, state-led institutional interventions exhibit stronger causal roles due to centralized planning. China's Rural Revitalization Strategy, launched in 2017, combines infrastructure upgrades, agricultural modernization subsidies, and urban-rural integration policies, driving counterurbanization in regions like the Yangtze River Delta through directed migration and industrial relocation, with census data indicating reversed urban primacy in select counties by 2020.[45] Such policies reflect a top-down institutional push against over-urbanization, though their long-term efficacy depends on sustained fiscal commitments amid competing urban priorities. Overall, while these factors amplify underlying economic drivers, empirical evidence underscores their role in directing migration volumes and demographics, particularly where urban costs or crises heighten rural viability.[48]Empirical Patterns and Evidence
Global Trends and Data Metrics
Counterurbanization manifests primarily in high-income and advanced economies rather than as a uniform global reversal of urbanization. According to United Nations estimates, the global urban population share reached 56 percent in 2020 and is projected to climb to 68 percent by 2050, driven largely by rapid urbanization in Asia and Africa, with rural population growth turning negative at -0.08 percent annually by 2024.[49][50] In contrast, more developed regions exhibit slower urban growth rates—averaging under 0.5 percent annually since 2000—and localized net outflows from core urban areas to peripheral and rural zones, reflecting counterurbanization dynamics observed since the 1970s.[51][52] Empirical metrics in OECD countries highlight this pattern through net internal migration data and population redistribution. For instance, during the 1970s and 1980s, rural areas in many OECD states grew faster than urban cores, with negative correlations between population change and settlement size indicating deconcentration from largest metros.[53] More recently, analyses of census and mobility data show rural regions proximate to urban centers gaining 0.2 to 1 percent annually in population via urban-to-rural flows, often tied to commuting patterns.[54] The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated these shifts temporarily, with studies documenting increased rural inflows: in Sweden and Slovenia, rural municipalities recorded net gains of 0.5 to 1.5 percent in population between 2020 and 2022, attributed to remote work and amenity preferences.[4]| Region/Group | Urban Share (2020) | Annual Urban Growth Rate (2015-2020) | Evidence of Counterurbanization |
|---|---|---|---|
| Global | 56% | 1.8% | Minimal; overall rural decline [49] |
| More Developed Regions | 80% | 0.4% | Net rural migration in select countries since 1970s [51] |
| OECD Average (select) | 82% | 0.3% | Rural gains near urban edges, e.g., +0.29% in U.S. nonmetro counties (2023-2024) [54][55] |
