Land reform in India
Land reform refers to efforts to reform the ownership and regulation of land in India. Or, Those lands which are redistributed by the government from landholders to landless people for agriculture or special purpose is known as Land Reform.
Goals
Land distribution has been part of India's state policy from the very beginning. Independent India's most revolutionary land policy was perhaps the abolition of the Zamindari system. Land-reform policy in India had two specific objectives:"The first is to remove such impediments to increase in agricultural production as arise from the agrarian structure inherited from the past. The second objective, which is closely related to the first, is to eliminate all elements of exploitation and social injustice within the agrarian system, to provide security for the tiller of the soil and assure equality of status and opportunity to all sections of the rural population.”
Categories
There are six main categories of reforms:- Abolition of intermediaries ;
- Tenancy regulation ;
- A ceiling on landholdings ;
- Attempts to consolidate disparate landholdings;
- encouragement of cooperative joint farming;
- settlement and regulation of tenancy.
History
After promising land reforms and elected to power in West Bengal in 1977, the Communist Party of India kept their word and initiated gradual land reforms, such as Operation Barga. The result was a more equitable distribution of land among the landless farmers, and enumeration of landless farmers. This has ensured an almost lifelong loyalty from the farmers and the communists were in power till 2011 assembly election.
In land reform in Kerala, the only other large state where the CPI came to power, state administrations have actually carried out the most extensive land, tenancy and agrarian labour wage reforms in the non-socialist late-industrialising world. Another successful land reform program was launched in Jammu and Kashmir after 1947.
All in all, land reforms have been successful only in pockets of the country, as people have often found loopholes in the laws that set limits on the maximum area of land that is allowed to be held by anyone person.
Ernest Feder, a specialist of rural economics, has said of the matter:
"...though since 1947, India has enacted perhaps more land reform legislation than any other country in the world, it has not succeeded in changing in any essentials the power pattern, the deep economic disparities, nor the traditional hierarchical nature of intergroup relationships which govern the economic life of village society."
Land ceilings
The following table shows land ceilings for each state in India.No. | State | Ceiling | Ceiling | Companies | Exempted from ceiling |
1 | Kerala | 10 standard acres ; 15 standard acres | 5 standard acres | Plantations | |
2 | Tamil Nadu | 30 standard acres ; 35 standard acres ; 40 standard acres | 30 standard acres | 15 standard acres | Plantations |
3 | West Bengal | 24.7 acres | mills, factories, workshop, tea gardens, livestock breeding farm, poultry farm, dairy, industrial park or industrial hub or industrial estate, fishery, transportation or terminal, logistic hub, township, financial hub, logistic hub, educational and medical institutions, oil and gas products piped transportation, and mining and allied activities |