Since cities may remain hotspots for many months, a district-level zoning system is meaningless in dense urban areas NEW DEKHI : As parts of India’s $2.9 trillion economy opened up on Monday, most megacities and major towns continued to largely remain shut for business.
By mid-April, a distinct urban skew had begun to emerge, with half of India’s detected covid-19 cases confined to just 15 cities.
That skew has only worsened since. And under the country’s new colour-coded classification, large swathes of urban India have been categorized as red zones.
But, within days, states are going to realize that opening up the economy while keeping cities shut is not going to work, said Vaidehi Tandel, a researcher at the Mumbai-based IDFC Institute.