Abstract
Urban growth in India is not equitable across different size categories, with concentration in large cities and low level of growth in small and medium towns. Market-oriented reforms in urban governance have increased this inequity as reflected in the implementation of JnNRUM and UIDSMMT programmes. This has also produced a bias against the poor in large cities in absorbing migrants and the level of infrastructure and services available to them in the areas where they reside when compared to the colonies of households with high income.
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