Charter Cities in developing economies

Poor governance and corruption are often cited as barriers to growth in developing countries, which are also home to some of the world's fastest-growing cities. But, as any policy expert or development specialist will tell you, retrofitting for good governance is extremely difficult to do. Corruption is hard to weed out once it is embedded in urban institutions, business models and cultures. One new concept in urban planning—called Charter Cities—explores ways in which good governance and freedom from corruption may be built into new cities from the very start, by outsourcing their development. The idea behind Charter Cities is that by building special reform zones, using unoccupied pieces of land and establishing charters to govern them, governments could quickly adopt new systems of rules that might be very different from those that exist in the rest of the country.

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