flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

Report identifies 600 cities that will drive economic growth through 2025

Urban Planning

Report identifies 600 cities that will drive economic growth through 2025

Of them, 440 are in emerging economies in China, South Asia, and Southeast Asia.


By Mike Chamernik, Associate Editor | February 2, 2016
Report identifies 600 cities worldwide that will drive economic growth through 2025

Manila, Philippines. Photo: travel oriented/Creative Commons

Cities like Manila, Wuhan, and Dhaka are relatively unknown now, but that is soon changing.

CityLab examined a new report from the McKinsey Global Institute that identified 600 cities from across the world that will be responsible for 65% of global economic growth from 2010 through 2025. The growing cities could account for as much as $30 trillion a year.

Of the 600 cities, 440 of them, like the aforementioned ones in the Philippines, China, and Bangladesh, are in emerging economies. They will account for nearly half of the global GDP growth during that same time frame.

“One billion people will enter the global consuming class by 2025,” the summary of the report reads on McKinsey’s website. “They will have incomes high enough to classify them as significant consumers of goods and services, and around 600 million of them will live in the Emerging 440.”

The study notes that the earth’s center of economic gravity, calculated by weighing national GDP by each nation’s geographic center of gravity, was situated in central Asia through 1820 before shifting to the seas north of Europe over the last half century. 

By 2025, however, the center of economic gravity will return to Asia, indicating that economic regions like China, South Asia, and Southeast Asia are on the rise.

The remaining 160 cities named in the report—developed metros like Tokyo, New York, and London—are projected to represent just 17% of growth between 2010 and 2025.

Related Stories

Urban Planning | Mar 14, 2018

Zaha Hadid Architects selected to design Aljada’s Central Hub

The hub will be the centerpiece of ARADA’s masterplan in Sharjah, UAE.

Urban Planning | Feb 26, 2018

A new way to approach community involvement for brownfield projects

A new community engagement program works with young adults to help the future of the neighborhood and get others involved.

Urban Planning | Feb 23, 2018

Paris car ban along the river Seine deemed illegal

Mayor Anne Hidalgo has appealed the decision.

Urban Planning | Feb 21, 2018

Leading communities in the Second Machine Age

What exactly is the Second Machine Age? The name refers to a book by MIT researchers Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee.

Urban Planning | Feb 14, 2018

6 urban design trends to watch in 2018

2017 saw the continuation of the evolution of expectations on the part of consumers, developers, office workers, and cities.

Urban Planning | Feb 12, 2018

Stormwater as an asset on urban campuses

While there is no single silver bullet to reverse the effects of climate change, designers can help to plan ahead for handling more water in our cities by working with private and public land-holders who promote more sustainable design and development.

Urban Planning | Jan 24, 2018

Vision Zero comes to Austin: An outside perspective

Aside from the roads being wider and the lack of infrastructure for bikes and pedestrians, there seemed to be some deeper unpredictability in the movement of people, vehicles, bikes, and buses.

Urban Planning | Jan 10, 2018

Keys to the city: Urban planning and our climate future

Corporate interests large and small are already focused on what the impact of climate change means to their business.

Urban Planning | Jan 2, 2018

The ethics of urbanization

While we focus on designing organized and supportive architecture, much of urbanization is created through informal settlements.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category


Urban Planning

Popular Denver e-bike voucher program aids carbon reduction goals

Denver’s e-bike voucher program that helps citizens pay for e-bikes, a component of the city’s carbon reduction plan, has proven extremely popular with residents. Earlier this year, Denver’s effort to get residents to swap some motor vehicle trips for bike trips ran out of vouchers in less than 10 minutes after the program opened to online applications.



halfpage1 -

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021