SYLLABUS

GS-2: Government Policies and Interventions for Development in various sectors and Issues arising out of their Design and Implementation.

GS-3: Land Reforms in India.

Context: The World Inequality Lab has released a working paper titled “Land Inequality in India: Nature, History, and Markets”, highlighting extreme inequalities in land ownership in rural India.

More on the News

  • The findings are based on data from the 2011 Socio-Economic and Caste Census (SECC), which covered about 650 million people from 270,000 villages across ten of the largest states of India.
  • The findings are significant in the context of ongoing debates on agrarian distress, farm laws, and the need for land reforms.

Key Findings of the Study

  • Extreme Concentration of Land Ownership: The top 10% of rural households own about 44% of total land, indicating a high concentration of land ownership.
    • Even within this group, the top 5% and top 1% control 32% and 18% respectively, indicating a highly skewed distribution at the top.
  • Dominance of Large Landholders at Village Level: In an average village, the largest landholder controls about 12.4% of total land, and in nearly 3.8% of villages, a single individual owns more than 50%, indicating persistent landlord dominance.
  • Sharp Regional Disparities: Land inequality varies significantly across states, with Kerala having the highest Gini coefficient at 90, followed by Bihar, Punjab, Tamil Nadu and West Bengal, each with a Gini coefficient of around 80.
    • States like Karnataka and Rajasthan (Gini coefficient <65) exhibit relatively lower inequality.
    • A lower Gini coefficient indicates a more equal distribution of income or wealth within a population, meaning a smaller gap between the rich and poor.  
  • High Inequality (Gini Coefficient): The land Gini coefficient stands at around 71, reflecting extremely high inequality, especially when landless households are included in the analysis.
  • Widespread Landlessness: Nearly 46% of rural households are landless, making landlessness the single largest contributor to overall inequality in rural India.
  • High Variation in Landlessness Across States: States such as Punjab (73%), Bihar (59%), and Madhya Pradesh (51%) report very high levels of landlessness, whereas Rajasthan (34%) and Uttar Pradesh (39%) have comparatively lower proportions.

Key Determinants of Land Inequality in India

  • Historical Legacy: Colonial land tenure systems such as zamindari and landlordism created entrenched inequalities that persist even today.
  • Socio-Economic Factors: Caste hierarchies and social stratification have historically limited land access for marginalized communities, especially SCs and STs.
  • Market Forces: Rising land prices, commercialisation, and “land squeeze” due to urbanisation and infrastructure projects have increased concentration.
  • Agro-Ecological Conditions: Regions with fertile land and better productivity tend to have higher concentration, as land becomes more valuable and competitive.

Implications of Land Inequality

  • Economic Inequality and Rural Distress: Unequal land distribution reinforces rural poverty and agrarian distress, as landless households lack productive assets and collateral for credit, often leading to indebtedness and migration.
  • Deepening Social Inequality: Land concentration exacerbates caste and class divides, limiting access of marginal groups to economic opportunities, public services, and decision-making structures.
  • Distorted Agricultural Development: Concentration of land restricts broad-based agricultural growth, as small farmers face constraints in access to inputs and technology, while large holdings are not always efficiently utilised.
  • Policy Ineffectiveness: Welfare schemes such as subsidies and MSP support may disproportionately benefit larger landholders, reducing their impact on vulnerable sections.
  • Food Security and Climate Risks: High land inequality can weaken agricultural resilience to climate shocks, as marginal farmers lack adaptive capacity, posing long-term risks to food security and sustainable farming.

Land Reform Measures to Reduce Inequality

  • Post-Independence Structural Reforms: Early reforms (1950s–70s) focused on abolition of intermediaries (zamindari), tenancy regulation, and land ceiling laws, but redistribution remained limited (≈2% of cultivable land) due to uneven implementation.
  • Tenancy Reforms and Security of Cultivation: Measures were introduced to provide security of tenure and fair rent, though outcomes varied across states due to weak enforcement and informal tenancy practices.
    • Operation Barga (West Bengal, 1978) registered around 1.4 million sharecroppers, improving both equity and agricultural productivity, making it one of the most effective tenancy reforms.
  • Rights-Based Approach: The Forest Rights Act, 2006, recognises individual and community land rights of forest-dwelling tribes, aiming to correct historical injustices.
  • Digitisation and Modern Governance Initiatives: Programmes such as Digital India Land Records Modernization Programme (DILRMP) and SVAMITVA aim to modernise land records, enhance transparency, and reduce disputes, thereby improving land governance.


SOURCES

Indian Express
The Print
The Hindu

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