Ms Urban Tools Mechanism
Ms Urban Tools Mechanism
[97]
 - R.S. Deshpande 
Professor and Head, Agricultural Development and Rural Transformation Unit, 
Institute for Social and Economic Change, Bangalore, India 
Land  problems  in  India  continue  to  attract  equal  attention  from  policy-makers  and  academics.  The 
renewed  interest  in  land  issues  stems  from  the  perceived  impact  of  liberalization  and  opening  up  the 
economy.  Tenancy,  land  ceiling  and  land  administration  are  being  revisited  with  a  new  perspective. 
Among  the  issues  under  renewed  focus,  legalizing  tenancy,  revising  the  ceiling  limits,  quality  of  land, 
meeting  the  challenge  of  miniscule  holdings  that  are  a  consequence  of  marginalization  and  land 
administration  are  dominating  the  debate.  This  paper  looks  at  these  issues.  It  sets  a  background  to  the 
emergence  of  land  policy  in  India  from  pre-Independence  and,  after  tracing  it  through  various  phases, 
maps out the impacts and emerging challenges. After an analysis of the development of land policy over 
various planning periods, the issues at stake during the 1990s are reviewed. Finally a case is made for a 
new  land-policy  framework  that  includes  reforms  to  the  maintenance  of  land  records,  deals  with 
concealed  tenancy  and  non-viable  land  holdings,  and  the  problem  of  land  quality.  These  issues  have 
assumed greater importance in the current economic transition in rural areas. 
INTRODUCTION 
Land  policy  in  India  has  been  a  major  topic  of  government  policy  discussions  since  the  time  prior  to 
Independence  from  British  rule.  The  peasants  of  the  country  strongly  backed  the  independence 
movement  and  the  "Land  to  the  Tiller"  policy  of  the  Congress  Party  because  of  the  prevailing  agrarian 
conditions.  The  agrarian  structure  during  British  administration  emerged  with  a  strong  historical 
background  (Baden  Powel,  1974;  Dutt,  1976;  Appu,  1996).  The  land-revenue  system  implemented  by 
Todar Mal during Akbar's regime can be traced as the possible beginning of systematic efforts to manage 
the  land.  This  method  incorporated  measurement,  classification  and  fixation  of  rent  as  its  main 
components.  Under  the  various  pre-  British  regimes,  land  revenues  collected  by  the  state  confirmed  its 
right to land produce, and that it was the sole owner of the land. British rulers took a cue from this system 
and allowed the existence of noncultivating intermediaries. The existence of these parasitic intermediaries 
served as an economic instrument to extract high revenues (Dutt, 1947) as well as sustaining the political 
hold  on  the  country.  Thus  at  the  time  of  Independence  the  agrarian  structure  was  characterized  by 
parasitic,  rent-seeking  intermediaries,  different  land  revenue  and  ownership  systems  across  regions, 
small numbers of land holders holding a large share of the land, a high density of tenant cultivators, many 
of whom had insecure tenancy, and exploitative production relations (Appu, 1996). 
Immediately after Independence a Committee, under the Chairmanship of the late Shri J. C. Kumarappa 
(a senior Congress leader), was appointed to look into the problem of land. The Kumarappa Committee's 
report  recommended  comprehensive  agrarian  reform  measures.  India's  land  policy  in  the  decades 
immediately  following  its  independence  was  dominated  by  legislative  efforts  to  address  the  problems 
identified by the Kumarappa Committee (NCA, 1976; Joshi, 1987). A substantial volume of legislation was 
adopted, much of it flawed and little of it seriously implemented. 
Several important issues confronted the policy-makers. 
1. Land was concentrated in the hands of a few and there was a proliferation of intermediaries who had 
no vested interest in self-cultivation. Leasing out land was a common practice. 
2. The tenancy contracts were expropriative in nature and tenant exploitation was ubiquitous. 
3.  Land  records  were  in  extremely  bad  shape  giving  rise  to  a  mass  of  litigation.  It  is  ironic  that  the 
Supreme  Court  of  India  in  1989  commented  that  the  revenue  records  are  not  legal  documents  of  title 
(Wadhwa, 1989). This is a sad commentary on the land records of the country. 
It  is  against  this  background  that  land  policy  has  been  shaped  in  India.  While  land-reform  legislation 
remained  active,  land  policies  in  more  recent  decades  have  focused  less  on  land  reform  and  more  on 
land development and administration. 
Land policy in India has undergone broadly four phases since Independence. 
1.  The  first  and  longest  phase  (1950  -  72)  consisted  of  land  reforms  that  included  three  major  efforts: 
abolition  of  the  intermediaries,  tenancy  reform,  and  the  redistribution  of  land  using  land  ceilings.  The 
abolition  of  intermediaries  was  relatively  successful,  but  tenancy  reform  and  land  ceilings  met  with  less 
success. 
2. The second phase (1972 - 85) shifted attention to bringing uncultivated land under cultivation. 
3.  The  third  phase  (1985  -  95)  increased  attention  towards  water  and  soil  conservation  through  the 
Watershed  Development,  Drought-Prone  Area  Development  (DPAP)  and  Desert-Area  Development 
Programmes (DADP).  A central government Waste land Development Agency  was established to focus 
on wasteland and degraded land. Some of the land policy from this phase continued beyond its final year. 
4.  The  fourth  and  current  phase  of  policy  (1995  onwards)  centres  on  debates  about  the  necessity  to 
continue with land legislation and efforts to improve land revenue administration and, in particular, clarity 
in land records. 
This paper is an attempt to discuss the critical issues pertaining to land policy in India beginning with the 
emergence  of  a  post-Independence  policy  in  a  historical  context,  and  from  a  viewpoint  of  differential 
provincial policies. Naturally, land reforms predominate the discussion here. Land reforms have been one 
of  the  important  land  policy  initiatives  in  India  that  have  brought  a  fundamental  change  in  the  entire 
approach  towards  development.  The  paper  discusses  the  impact  of  land  reforms  and  the  changing 
phases of land administration. The focus is on the role and development process of land policy in India in 
the  context  of  overall  changes  in  India's  development  policies.  It  also  addresses  the  political  and 
economic  aspects  of  the  policy  initiatives,  beginning  with  the  various  land-reform  efforts  and  finally 
analysing the recent land development and administration policies. The paper  incorporates a discussion 
on  the  closely  related  goals  of  land  policy,  i.e.  poverty  elimination,  conflict  management,  sustainable 
economic growth and good environmental management. In the final analysis, the paper highlights current 
issues pertaining to the relationships among land policy, poverty and the development initiatives. 
EMERGENCE OF LAND POLICY IN INDIA 
Given  India's  vastness,  diversity  and  various  political,  economic  and  social  influences  from  a  history  of 
various  rulers  and  foreign  conquerors,  it  is  not  surprising  that  land  tenurial  and  administration  practices 
varied  significantly  throughout  the  subcontinent  at  the  time  of  Independence.  One  common  factor  was 
that land policies had been driven by the rulers' efforts to extract land revenue or tax from those working 
on the land. Throughout much of the country, the rulers appointed Zamindars, or tax collectors, who were 
contracted to collect  land revenue for  a given  large territory  and  pay fixed sums to the government (but 
often extracted as much as they could from the landholders and pocketed the difference). Though tenurial 
conditions varied significantly from region  to region, the numerous tenures could be classified under two 
broad  categories  -  the  Zamindari  and  Rayatwari  systems.  The  Zamindari  system  was  characterized  by 
one or more layers of proprietary rights between the state and the actual landholder. In the Rayatwari (or 
peasant proprietorship) system, no intermediaries existed in design but emerged in the process. 
The British rulers continued with existing land-revenue policies and procedures with a few but significant 
modifications. Perhaps most importantly, the British made the tax-collecting Zamindars into proprietors of 
the  estates  over  which  they  had  tax  collection  duties.  This  change  was  aimed  at  accomplishing  two 
objectives: simplifying the land-revenue collection process and creating a rural elite with a vested interest 
in British rule. Unfortunately, it converted the erstwhile landowners into insecure tenants. Over time, many 
Zamindars assigned their land-revenue collection duties to one or more layers of intermediaries who were 
also given  interests in the  land. The historical emergence and perpetuation of intermediaries served the 
purpose  of  land  revenue  administration  and  political  control  of  the  successive  rulers,  but  their  numbers 
swelled.  The  large  patches  of  land  held  by  them  were  let  to  tenants  at  exorbitantly  high  rents.  That 
created a disincentive among the tenant cultivators to develop the land, and consequently impacted upon 
production. Thus, the Colonial Government, out of its interest to administer the country effectively, did not 
make  any  substantial  changes  in  the  land-revenue  system  but  promoted  the  class  of  non-cultivating 
intermediaries. 
At  the  time  of  Independence,  India  faced  a  major  challenge  of  setting  right  the  agrarian  structure  as 
promised  during  the  independence  struggle.  Thorner  and  Thorner  (1961),  in  an  analysis  of  the  agrarian 
structure  of  India,  vividly  describe  the  pre-Independence  structure  as  a  complex  of  legal,  economic  and 
social  relations  -  a  multilayered  structure  that  pulled  down  the  production  efficiency  in  the  agricultural 
sector.  A  brief  review  of  the  literature  also  reveals  a  myriad  of  agrarian  relations  in  India,  varying  from 
peasant  proprietorship  to  a  pure  landlord  -  serf  relationship  (Joshi,  1975,  1987;  Ladejinsky,  1977).  The 
first  task  placed  before  the  first  Indian  parliament  was  to  address  land  policy.  Because  India  has  a 
densely  populated  agrarian  economy,  almost  all  other  developmental  initiatives  also  involved  land  as  a 
central and a complex issue, as it clearly represented social status and not just the means of production. 
While recognizing the need to bring about land reforms in the country, the Constitution of India provided 
under Article 39 that: (1) the ownership and control of the material resources of the country should be so 
distributed as best to serve the common good; and (2) the operation of the economic system should not 
result in a concentration of wealth or a means to production to the common detriment. 
The  Constitution  of  India  also  made  land  a  state  (provincial)  subject.  So,  only  state  (provincial) 
legislatures have the power to enact and implement land-reform laws. However, the central government 
played a significant advisory and financial role in land policy based on its constitutional role in social and 
economic  planning  (a  role  held  concurrently  with  the  states).  The  Government  of  India  established  a 
National  Planning  Commission  immediately  after  Independence  to  fulfil  this  role  of  social  and  economic 
planning. 
The  Planning  Commission  has  prepared  a  series  of  Five-Year  Plans  since  1951.  Land  policy  has  been 
one of the important components incorporated in all the plans. The policy statements are sometimes quite 
explicit  in  the  plan  documents,  but  are  more  often  implicitly  stated.  An  overview  of  changes  in  the  land 
policy as reflected through the various plan documents is given in Table 1. Land reform policy was spelt 
out  in  the  First  Five-Year  Plan.  The  plan  aimed  to  reduce  disparities  in  income  and  wealth,  to  eliminate 
exploitation and to provide security to tenants, as well as to achieve social transformation through equality 
of  status  and  an  opportunity  for  different  sections  of  the  population  to  participate  in  development 
initiatives. 
TABLE  1 
Land policy formulation through planning period 
Plan 
period 
Major issue  Policy thrust 
First 
Plan1951 - 
56 
Area under cultivation to be increased. 
Community development (CD) networks 
to take care of the village commons. 
Vast uncultivated lands locked under 
Land reforms to bring in the fallow under 
cultivation and increase land use 
efficiency. Tenant to be given the rights 
to cultivate land. Abolition of 
large sizes of holdings.  intermediaries. 
Second 
Plan 1956 
- 61 
Concern about vast rainfed agriculture, 
low land productivity and thrust on 
irrigated agriculture. 
Soil conservation as an important 
programme. First phase of land reform 
implementation. Irrigation development 
for the rainfed areas. Training and 
extension work for the technology 
through CD. 
Third Plan 
1961 - 66 
Food security concern dominated. 
Cultivable waste land to be brought 
under cultivation. Bringing the lagging 
regions under mainstream growth. 
Area development as an approach. 
Intensive area development programme 
adopted for selected districts. An 
integrated land policy approach was 
inherent. Soil surveys were taken up. 
Fourth 
Plan 1969 
- 74 
Emphasis on food security continued as 
minimum dietary requirements to be 
met. Incentives were created for 
diversion of land towards food crops and 
enhancing the capacity of such land. 
Domination of large holding sizes and 
low allocation and technical efficiency. 
Increased emphasis on irrigation and soil 
conservation in dryland regions and 
technological change introduced. Higher 
cropping intensity the main concern. 
Second phase of land reforms with land 
ceiling acts and consolidation of holding. 
Institutional changes brought in. 
Fifth Plan 
1974 - 79 
Problems of degradation land 
management in irrigated command 
areas surfaced. Drought-prone areas 
attracted attention. 
Drought-prone area development. Desert 
area development programmes, and soil 
conservation started and further 
enhanced. New impetus to dry farming. 
Sixth Plan 
1980 - 85 
Underutilization of land resources. 
Drought-prone areas continued to attract 
attention. Attention lagging areas on the 
background of green revolution required 
cultivation. 
Land and water management programme 
under drought-prone area programme in 
selected areas. 
Seventh 
Plan 1985 
- 90 
Soil erosion and land degradation 
surfaced as major issues. Land going 
out of cultivation. Deforestation and 
degradation of forest lands. 
Soil and water conservation and averting 
land degradation. Specific attention to 
degraded lands. Wastelands 
Development programmes. Long-term 
view of land management. 
Eighth 
Plan 1992 
- 97 
Dryland and rainfed areas requiring 
attention. Degradation of land in irrigated 
command areas. Peoples' participation 
surfaced as major issue in land 
management at village level. 
Emphasis on watershed approach. Soil 
conservation merged with watershed 
programmes. Agroclimatic regional 
planning approach incorporated. 
Ninth Plan 
1997 - 
2002 
Land degradation increased significantly. 
Integrating Watershed Development 
Programme across various components. 
Rethinking on land reforms. Gap 
between potentials and actual crop 
yields need to be bridged. Need for a 
long-term policy document. 
Bringing the underutilized land under 
cultivation. Management of wastelands. 
Maintenance of village commons. 
Decentralized land management system. 
Panchayat Raj institutions to manage the 
village lands. Rethinking on land 
legislation. 
Source: from  various  plan  documents.  These  are  not  exhaustive  statements  but  only  indicative  of  the 
thrust.  Gaps  in  the  plan  periods  were  annual  plans  and  full  plan  documents  could  not  be  prepared  for 
these gaps. 
The  focus  and  emphasis  on  land  policy  has  changed  during  the  last  50  years,  but  the  core  issues 
continued  to  revolve  around  a  just  distribution  of  land  resources.  Land  reforms  predominated  the  land 
policy  issues  during  the  first  three  decades  after  Independence.  Initially  land  reforms  and  community 
development  came  more  or  less  together  and  these  interventions  were  meant  to  provide  a  means  of 
production  to  the  millions  of  poor,  who  either  lacked  resources  or  did  not  have  know-how  to  use  them. 
Among the first phase reforms were: (1) the abolition of intermediaries, aiming to eliminate the land rights 
of  intermediaries  who  held  large  share  of  the  land  resources;  (2)  tenancy  reforms  based  on  the 
hypothesis "tenant efficiency" and expecting an increase in capital growth. In addition to these economic 
goals,  the  tenancy  reforms  were  taken  as  an  intervention  to  provide  tenants  with  more  secure  and 
profitable  land  rights.  Efforts  to  establish  ceilings  on  the  size  of  land  holdings  followed.  These  were 
intended  to  reduce  the  concentration  of  wealth  in  the  hands  of  few  and  provide  a  means  of  living  to 
others. The second important intervention that was superimposed on the ongoing process of land reforms 
came  in  the  form  of  the  area-development  programmes  like  the  Drought-Prone  Area  Programme  and 
Desert  Development  Programme.  Both  programmes  focused  on  building  land  resources  in  ecologically 
fragile  regions  and  providing  employment  opportunities  to  their  inhabitants.  Another  similar  intervention 
came  from  the  policy's  emphasis  on  soil  and  water  conservation  through  a  massive  Watershed 
Development  Programme  highlighting  the  qualitative  aspect  of  land.  A  Wasteland  Development 
Programme to restore biodiversity and manage the environment in drought-prone areas came next in the 
form of the National Wasteland Development Board. Until the Watershed Development Programme, land 
reforms  dominated  the  land  policy  scenario.  There  is  now  a  fresh  debate  about  the  next  phase  of  land 
reforms. 
TENANCY REFORMS: WHAT SUCCEEDED AND WHAT FAILED? 
In  the  earlier  phases  of  land  reforms  the  emphasis  was  on  food  production,  extending  technology  and 
abolishing  regressive  institutions;  poverty  as  an  issue  was  not  explicitly  addressed.  Raj  Krishna  (1961) 
grouped land-reform measures into four groups: liberative, distributive, organizational and developmental. 
These  groups  help  to  clarify  the  role  of  land  policy  as  a  process  of  overall  development.  The  liberative 
measures  aimed  at  the  emancipation  of  the  actual  tillers  of  the  land  from  the  yoke  of  the  landlord.  This 
was  to  be  achieved  by  conferring  the  land  title  or  occupancy  rights  of  the  tenant.  Fixing  of  rent  was 
undertaken  in  a  few  states,  e.g.  West  Bengal's  "Operation  Barga",  where  tenancy  was  recorded.  The 
distributive measures were meant to achieve this by delivering material resources to the poor as promised 
by the Constitution of India, especially those who required land as a productive resource. This was to be 
achieved by redistributing landownership from large landholders to the landless, specifically from socially 
weaker sections. The tenancy reforms and ceiling on land holding represented liberative and distributive 
measures  according  to  Raj  Krishna's  categorization.  Organizational  reforms  aimed  at  selecting  and 
implementing a particular  form of agricultural  production practice,  with the help  of technological change, 
were  introduced  in  the  mid-1960s.  These  three  policies  operating  together  put  pressure  on  land 
resources,  prompting  a  need  for  developmental  reform.  Developmental  reforms  encompassed  other 
issues interconnected with land policy, which impacted the overall development of the agricultural sector. 
All four components taken together form a part of the overall distributive and development initiatives that 
were  taken  immediately  after  Independence.  Even  though  Raj  Krishna  wrote  this  chapter  almost  at  the 
beginning  of  the  first  phase  of  land  reforms,  the  description  aptly  gives  a  clear  theoretical  view  of  the 
reforms that followed in the next two decades. 
Immediately  after  Independence  four  important  components  of  land  reform  were  thought  of  as  major 
policy  interventions  in  building  the  land  policy.  These  included:  (1)  the  abolition  of  intermediaries;  (2) 
tenancy  reforms;  (3)  fixing  ceilings  on  land  holdings;  and  (4)  consolidation  of  landholdings.  These  were 
taken in phases because of the need to establish a political will for their wider acceptance. By 1960, the 
whole  process  of  legal  enactment  of  the  abolition  of  intermediaries  was  completed.  This  was  the  most 
successful component of the landreform process. 
The  major  planks  of  tenancy  reform  included  security  of  tenure,  termination  of  tenancy,  resumption  for 
personal cultivation by the landlord, regulation of rent and confirmation of ownership rights. Various state 
laws were enacted between 1960 and 1972. These differed across the states and territories. Owing to the 
diverse and complicated nature of social and agrarian structure in the countryside, no uniform guidelines 
could be formulated for the whole country. However, some broad guidelines were given in addition to the 
directives  in  the  successive  plan  documents.  The  consensus  on  the  policy  of  tenancy  reforms favoured 
neither  complete  expropriation  of  landlordism  nor  the  interests  of  the  tenants.  In  the  national  guidelines 
the  following  measures  were  communicated  to  the  state  governments  for  incorporation  in  the  state 
legislation: 
  security of the tenancy to be conferred on the actual cultivator; 
  fair rent to be fixed between 20 and 25 percent of the gross produce; 
  landowners may be permitted to cultivate land for their personal use; 
  the surrender of the tenancy rights with mutual consent; 
  in  respect  of  some  of  the  area,  the  landlord  -  tenant  relationship  to  be  ended  and  the  tenant 
cultivator be brought directly into contact with the state; 
  disabled  persons,  defence  personnel  and  other  such  exemptions  to  be  allowed  to  lease  their 
land; 
  the  term  "personal  cultivation"  should  be  clearly  defined  if  landlords  are  allowed  to  remove 
tenants in order to resume cultivation; 
  tenancy records should be corrected and oral tenancies should be abolished. 
Because land is subject to state control in India and the relationship between production and land tenure 
varies from state to state, the national policy recommendations resulted in differing tenancy reform laws in 
each state. Some of the basic differences in the tenancy reform laws are outlined in Table 2. 
Tenancy is completely prohibited in some states but completely free in others. Punjab and Haryana have 
not  prohibited  tenancy  whereas  Karnataka  has  a  nearcomplete  ban  on  tenancy.  Some  states  have 
conferred ownership rights on tenant cultivators except for sharecroppers, whereas West Bengal chose to 
provide owner-like rights only to the sharecroppers. Some states, such as Maharashtra and Orissa, chose 
to  provide  different  tenancy  reform  regimes  for  different  areas  within  the  state.  Many  states  allowed 
tenancy  only  for  certain  limited  groups  of  people,  often  broadly  termed  "disabled"  (referring  to  physical 
disability).  Orissa  law  considers  a  landowner  owning  less  than  3  acres  of  land  as  a  disabled  person.  In 
Rajasthan  a  student  pursuing  studies  in  an  educational  institution  and  less  than  25  years  old  is  also  a 
disabled  person.  In  Uttar  Pradesh,  such  a  student  is  included  if  his  father  is  dead.  In  Uttar  Pradesh  all 
minors,  women  and  unmarried  daughters  are  not  treated  as  disabled,  unless  their  husband  or  father  is 
dead. In Bihar a public servant whose salary is below the given norm is treated as disabled. 
Among the various exceptions given under the tenancy acts, provisions allowing the landlords to remove 
tenants  in  order  to  resume  personal  cultivation  assumed  greater  importance  as  the  dominant  landlords 
took  advantage  of  this  clause.  The  clause  was  entered  with  a  view  to  induce  the  landlord  to  undertake 
personal  cultivation  and  also  to  control  absentee  landlordism.  Tenancy  acts  in  almost  all  the  states 
allowed  the  landlord  to  return  land,  if  required,  for  personal  cultivation,  but  the  terms  and  definitions 
differed. 
Most tenancy reform laws also contained provisions concerning the ability of tenants to surrender the land 
back  to  the  landlord  voluntarily.  These  provisions  were  used  by  landlords  to  weaken  the  impact  of  the 
laws.  In  most  states  the  surrender  of  land  falls  under  the  jurisdiction  of  the  revenue  authorities.  The 
authorities  allowed  such  surrender  after  verification  of  the  voluntary  element  in  the  process.  The  strong 
relationship between landlords and revenue officials often allowed the landlords to skirt the law's intention 
(Deshpande,  1998).  Punjab,  Kerala,  Karnataka,  Gujarat,  Tripura  and  Andhra  Pradesh  (Telangana  area) 
did  not  provide  for  any  surrender  by  the  tenant  to  the  landlord,  but  some  did  allow  for  surrender  to  the 
state.  Tenants  in  some  states  were  also  given  the  right  to  purchase  the  land.  For  example,  in 
Maharashtra, where tenancy is not prohibited, the tenant acquires the right to purchase the land after one 
year from the date of tenancy. 
TABLE  2 
Variations in tenancy laws across major Indian states 
State  Specific features 
Andhra 
Pradesh 
In Andhra region leasing is permitted but regulated. In Telangana region leasing 
out land by large holders is prohibited. Smallholdings below three family 
holdings are allowed to lease out land for a period of five years. Exemptions are 
provided. 
Assam  There are no restrictions on leasing out of land. 
Bihar  Leasing out is prohibited except for persons with disability. Public servants with 
a salary not exceeding Rs250 are included under exempt category. 
Gujarat  Leasing is prohibited and unauthorized leasing is punishable offence with a fine 
up to Rs1 000. 
Karnataka  Leasing is generally prohibited. Soldiers and seamen are exempted. Recent 
amendments allow further limited exemptions, most granted on a case-by-case 
basis. Violations result in land vesting in the state. 
Maharashtra  No ban on tenancy, but the tenant acquires the right to purchase the land within 
one year of the commencement of tenancy. 
Madhya 
Pradesh 
Abolished the past leases but not the future leases. Past leases are divided into 
two categories called Bhumiswami tenant without payment and other tenant 
with payment. They cultivate on terms and conditions agreed between parties. 
Other land owners can lease out their lands for one year during consecutive 
period of three years. 
Orissa  Prohibited all future leases. Past leases continue after surrendering half of the 
leased land to the landlord or rayat. 
Punjab and 
Haryana 
There is no ban on leasing and the tenants do not acquire any rights on land. 
Rajasthan  The landowners (Khatedar) can lease out for a non-renewable period of five 
years. Ghair Khatedar tenants can sublease for a period of one year. 
Tamil Nadu  Leasing is permitted but the law stipulates that every contract should be in 
written form and in triplicate. A copy of the document shall be deposited with the 
revenue officials 
Uttar Pradesh  Lease for any period is prohibited. Exemptions allowed for widows, unmarried 
women, military persons, students and physically disabled. 
West Bengal  Fixed-rent leasing is prohibited, but sharecropping is allowed and subject to 
protection. A person lawfully cultivating others' land is presumed to be a 
sharecropper and is given permanent and heritable rights with a fixed level of 
rent (25% if sharecropper provides inputs and 50% if landlord shares in inputs). 
On resumption the sharecropper has to be left with 1 ha of land and the 
landowner can resume on a maximum of 3 ha. 
The  types  of  tenancy  contracts  have  also  changed  since  1971  -  72.  Changing  patterns  in  tenancy 
contracts  are  presented  in  Figure  1.  There  are  fluctuations  in  cash  rents  and  rents  in  terms  of  fixed 
produce over years and across states, but rents in terms of share of produce show a consistent  decline. 
The picture has different shades across regions/states. 
The  regulation  of  rent  levels  was  an  important  aspect  of  the  tenancy  reform  legislations.  The  prevailing 
rent  levels  differed  across  the  states  in  the  country.  The  national  policy  recommended  that  fair  rent 
payable by a tenant shall be subject to mutual agreement but should be limited to 20  - 25 percent of the 
produce. Individual states recalculated this for the purpose of their legislations, some using land revenue 
as a basis and others using the gross value of produce. Most states using the gross value of produce set 
the maximum rent levels in the range of 25 - 33 percent. Therefore, the variations in the tenancy contracts 
across states is not unexpected, nor are changes to these contracts over the decades. 
The  most  controversial  and  debated  provision  of  the  tenancy  reforms  has  been  the  complete  or  near-
complete  ban  on  tenancy  in  many  states.  In  some  states  where  tenancy  is  legally  allowed,  the  tenancy 
reform laws also provided for the termination of tenancy under various circumstances: (1) the tenant has 
failed to pay rent for the year within the time stipulated in the law; (2) the tenant has been using land for 
purposes  other  than  agriculture;  (3)  the  land  has  been  made  unfit  for  cultivation;  (4)  the  tenant  has  not 
been personally cultivating the land; and (5) the term of the lease period has elapsed or the landlord has 
returned the land to personal cultivation (Deshpande, 1998). It must be noted that even where tenancy is 
technically  allowed,  provisions  that  give  long-term  and  protected  rights  to  tenants  can  have  the  same 
impact  as  a  ban  as  they  prevent  landowners  from  leasing  out  their  land.  The  National  Commission  on 
Agriculture  has  asserted  that  under  India's  present  ratio  of  agricultural  land  per  capita,  tenancy  as  such 
cannot  and  should  not  be  totally  banned  (National  Commission  on  Agriculture  Part  XV,  pp.  160). 
Experience  and  field  studies  have  shown  that  prohibition  on  tenancy  is  not  entirely  effective.  Tenancy 
continues to exist and some observers note that the ban on tenancy negatively impacts the landless and 
land-poor (Shah and Sah, 2002). It is interesting that all these restrictions have given rise to a refractory 
tenancy  market.  Concealed  tenancy  and  reverse  tenancy  proliferated  as  new  forms  (Nadkarni,  1976, 
2002). 
FIGURE  1 
Changing patterns in tenancy contracts 
Fixed money rent 
 
Share of produce 
 
Fixed produce 
 
Other contracts 
 
TABLE  3 
Changes in leasing of land in India: 1961 - 91 (percent of total) 
Farm 
category 
1961 - 62  1970 - 71  1980 - 81  1990 - 91 
 
No. of 
holdings 
Area  No. of 
holdings 
Area  No. of 
holdings 
Area  No. Of 
holdings 
Area 
Marginal  24.1  16.6  27.0  18.9  14.4  9.7  9.3  8.7 
Small  25.1  14.0  27.8  14.6  17.9  8.5  14.9  8.5 
Semi-medium  23.6  11.7  24.8  11.7  15.9  7.3  12.2  7.4 
Medium  20.5  9.6  20.9  8.7  14.5  6.6  13.1  6.9 
Large  19.5  8.3  15.9  5.9  11.5  5.3  16.7  11.4 
All sizes  23.5  10.7  25.7  10.6  15.2  7.2  11.0  8.3 
Source: National Sample Survey Organization of India, Report No. 407 of 48th Round, 1995, pp. 28 - 29. 
The  enactment  of  tenancy  legislation  in  1962  -  77  appears  to  have  resulted  in  a  sharp  decrease  in 
tenancy. National sample surveys (NSS) also record a dramatic fall in the area under tenancy from 23.34 
percent during 1952 - 53 to 10.7 percent in 1961 - 62, down to 7.2 percent in 1982. This settled down to 8 
percent  by  1991  as  revealed  by  the  48th  NSS  round  (see  Table  3).  Three  important  points  need  to  be 
noted  here.  First,  at  least  part  of  the  decrease  in  tenancy  resulted  from  landlords  evicting  their  tenants 
either in anticipation of the laws or using loopholes in the laws. One estimate is that tenancy reform laws 
led to evictions resulting in the rural poor losing access to about 30 percent of the operated area in India 
(Appu, 1996). Second, the NSS almost certainly underestimate tenancy: both landowners and tenants are 
often  afraid  to  reveal  tenancy  relationships  because  of  the  existing  legal  restrictions.  The  question  of 
concealed  tenancy  has  been  debated  and  it  is  recorded  that  anywhere  between  15  and  25  percent  of 
tenancies  in  the  country  are  illegal  and  concealed.  NSS  data  show  that  informal  leasing  of  land  is 
dominated  by  smaller  and  marginal  farmers.  More  than  80  percent  of  the  leased-in  land  is  held  by  this 
group.  Because  the  tenancy  agreement  is  oral  and  sharecroppers  are  weak  both  economically  and 
politically, they are rarely adequately recompensed. Sharecroppers only have a tenuous hold on the land 
they cultivate and invariably have to hand over the land to the owner at any time they demand. Third, the 
tenancy laws helped tenants to acquire ownership or owner-like rights in about 4 percent of the operated 
area.  These  benefits  were  concentrated  in  a  small  number  of  states  including  Kerala,  West  Bengal, 
Karnataka,  Assam,  Gujarat,  Jammu  and  Kashmir,  and  Maharashtra  (Ministry  of  Rural  Development, 
2001). 
The  agricultural  land-lease  market  has  changed  substantially  in  the  last  30  years.  Five  components 
assume significance in this process. 
1. The period of lease that used to be lifelong has been reduced, and in most states the period of lease 
(in many cases concealed tenancies) is now less than three years. 
2. Earlier there used to be little or no supervision by the landlord of the leased land. This has increased as 
a result of the fear of tenant occupancy and the landlord - tenant relations have become stronger in terms 
of resource-sharing and cost-sharing. 
3. The share of the landowner in investment used to be negligible but that has increased substantially as 
a consequence of technological advances. 
4. The rent that used to be fixed by the landlord has been regulated in a few states, but rarely effectively 
(West Bengal is an exception). In a few other states where tenancy is undercover, the landlord fixes the 
rent and this can be 50 - 85 percent of the net produce. 
5.  During  the  early  years  of  Independence  tenants  were  exploited  and  therefore  rarely  identified 
themselves  with  the  land  they  cultivated.  However,  now  the  tenants  identify  themselves  with  the  land. 
Thus,  the  tenant  cultivator's  production  efficiency  is  likely  to  have  increased.  This  should  be  true  where 
tenancy  has  been  recorded  in  the  legal  and  protected  framework  of  the  landlease  market.  But  it  is 
important  here  to  take  cognizance  of  two  situations:  (a)  illegal  tenancy  in  a  region  with  a  total  ban  on 
tenancy  and  (b)  informal  tenancy  in  a  region  where  tenancy  is  legally  permitted  but  for  various  reasons 
the  tenancy  contract  is  not  recorded.  In  these  two  cases  the  allocation  and  technical  efficiency  of  the 
tenant is likely to be low and needs attention. 
CEILINGS ON HOLDINGS: REVISITED 
Land distribution at the time of Independence was extremely skewed. Fifty-three percent of the land was 
held by 7 percent of the landowners,  whereas 28 percent of landowners  with submarginal  and marginal 
holdings owned about 6 percent. The land distribution across the states was also quite skewed as can be 
seen  from  the  Lorenz  ratios  of  1952  -  53  (Figure  2,  Table  4).  Central  policy-makers  felt  that  ceilings  on 
landholdings  were  essential  because  of  three  economic  compulsions:  (1)  there  was  strong  evidence 
indicating  an  inverse  size  -  productivity  relationship,  hinting  that  the  aggregate  production  efficiency  is 
hampered when land is held in large holdings; (2) there was some evidence that large holders of land left 
large  areas  fallow  thereby  perpetuating  uneconomic  land  use;  (3)  a  large  proportion  of  the  population 
were land-based poor  who wanted land as an economic resource for their livelihood. It was thought that 
surplus land could be distributed to such poor people. The general position in favour of land ceilings was 
based largely on providing social justice and equity and not on the grounds of increasing production and 
developing agriculture. 
Legislation providing for ceilings on agricultural holdings was enacted in two phases, 1955 - 72 and 1972 
-  present.  The  second  phase  was  more  radical  in  its  content  and  to  a  large  extent  was  based  on  the 
ineffectiveness of the first phase. The implementation process revealed several loopholes which landlords 
effectively exploited. Among the major loopholes that existed in the ceiling acts of various states included 
an ambiguity in various definitions, retrospective transfers, large numbers of exemptions, and the basis of 
fixing ceiling limits. High ceiling limits exempted a large number of landlords. The national guidelines for 
this phase were prepared during a Chief Ministers' Conference in July 1972. Consequent to the formation 
of  the  national  guidelines,  all  the  states  modified  or  enacted  their  own  laws.  Among  various  factors  that 
featured  in  the  debate  were  the  definitions  of  family,  transfers,  standard  holdings,  ceiling  limits  and 
exempted categories. The National Commission on Agriculture has asserted that any attempt to lower the 
ceiling  limits  might  further  create  uncertainty  in  the  minds  of  the  middle  and  large  farmers  that  may 
undermine  agricultural  production  (NCA,  1976,  Part  XV,  p.  162).  Many  of  the  matters  were  intended  to 
simplify  the  process  but  in  effect  complicated  the  implementation.  Ironically,  legislation  was  passed  by 
those who were likely to be affected by it. Mearns (1999)  writes: "Various exemptions and loopholes left 
by  individual  states  allowed  landlords  to  retain  control  over  land  holdings,  most  infamously  through 
benami  (nameless  entity)  transactions,  whereby  village  recordkeepers  (patwaris)  could  be  bribed  to 
register holdings in the names of deceased or fictitious persons" (p.10). 
FIGURE  2 
Lorenz ratios for operational holdings and ownership holdings across states 
Lorenz ratios for operational holdings across states 
 
Lorenz ratios for ownership holdings across states 
 
Many  analysts  of  the  Indian  land-market  situation  have  noted  that  the  process  of  marginalization  is 
sharply increasing in the country, proliferating the number of holdings considered economically unviable. 
Moreover,  demographic  pressures  are  reducing  the  size  of  holdings  in  the  top  brackets  and  leading  to 
marginalization of holdings in the smaller  brackets. A recent study on  the causes of farmers' suicides in 
Karnataka  noted  that  the  land  size  has  been  fast  declining  making  many  holdings  inefficiently  small  to 
sustain  a  farm  family  (Deshpande,  2002).  India's  First  Five-Year  Plan  suggested  the  concept  of  an 
economically  viable  holding,  which  was  then  about  2  acres  for  self-cultivation.  The  Maharashtra  law 
defined the economic holding as four permanently irrigated acres. Presently, more than 60 percent of the 
holdings  fall  under  the  definition  of  marginal  and  submarginal  land  holding  (less  than  1  ha).  It  must  be 
emphasized that during 1961 - 62 this proportion was only 47 percent. 
The  entire  emphasis  of  placing  ceilings  on  landholdings  was  to  detect  surplus  land  that  was  above 
economic holding size, acquire that land and redistribute it among the landless who require an economic 
base.  However,  redistribution  failed  in  most  states.  Acquiring  surplus  land  was  not  effective  and  as  the 
acquisition was meagre the redistribution was also insignificant. This failure was mainly a consequence of 
the associated political process and the village-level politicization of the issues. The relationship between 
the  bureaucrats  and  politicians  substantially  fuelled  this.  A  government  document  states:  "It  is  widely 
recognized that the chief reason for the poor implementation of land reforms has been the lack of political 
will.  It  would  not  be  surprising  to  expect  so,  if  we  appreciate  the  realities  of  the  rural  situation  and 
development  of  Indian  politics"  (quoted  in  Rao,  1990).  Even  the  microlevel  studies  noted  that  the 
functioning  of  land  tribunals  (local  level  bodies  established  to  implement  the  land  reforms)  was  not 
transparent  and  doubts  were  raised  about  the  functioning  of  unofficial  members  (Thimmaiah  and  Aziz, 
1983). The surplus land distributed does not form even 2 percent of the total net operated area, and even 
this small share was concentrated in only six states (West Bengal, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Assam, 
Jammu and Kashmir, and Rajasthan) (Ministry of Rural Development, 2001). 
Despite the limited success in the redistribution of surplus agricultural land, ceiling laws have succeeded 
in keeping a check on concentration of land in the hands of a few. A large number of experts now agree 
that  the  further  lowering  of  ceilings  and  further  implementation  of  ceiling  laws  is  no  longer  a  feasible 
option  of  engendering  social  equity.  Marginalization  of  the  size  of  holdings,  with  the  proliferation  of 
miniscule holdings, has emerged as a new challenge. 
CONSOLIDATION OF HOLDINGS 
Of all land-reform components, the consolidation of holdings has received least attention because of the 
timing of its attempted implementation and political process through which it went. During the early 1970s 
it was observed (see National Sample Survey 26th Round, 1971/72) that many landowners held several 
fragmented  parcels  scattered  across  the  revenue  villages.  This  was  an  easy  escape  from  the  Land 
Ceiling Act and therefore it was felt that landholding of an individual holder should be consolidated. The 
economic efficiency was also an associated argument. Legislation on consolidation was adopted  in some 
states  in  order  to  reduce  inefficiency  in  operations  and  cultivation.  For  the  most  part,  these  laws  and 
associated consolidation programmes have failed to achieve their goals because of a lack of political will 
and administrative difficulties. The  legislation was difficult to formulate and did not consider the reality of 
the  caste  system  within  the  farming  communities,  and  the  local  processes  of  politicization.  Except  in 
Punjab,  Haryana  and  Uttar  Pradesh,  consolidation  programmes  have  not  made  any  impact.  Although 
legislative provisions for consolidation have been adopted in 15 states, these laws included too many get-
out clauses. For example, Madhya Pradesh and West Bengal provide only for voluntary consolidation; it 
is  more  or  less  similar  in  Gujarat,  Himachal  Pradesh  and  Maharashtra.  Given  its  importance  and  the 
extremely  unsatisfactory  results  of  this  programme,  it  is  essential  to  evaluate  the  effectiveness  of  the 
legislation and to rethink an institutional solution. 
Demographic  and  economic  pressures  naturally  cause  fragmentation  of  land  and  marginalization  of 
holdings  can  be  seen  as  an  important  outcome  of  this.  There  are  different  views  on  the  process  and 
economic  impact  of  the  fragmentation  of  holdings.  As  can  be  seen  from  the  data  (NSS,  1992;  Mearns, 
1999),  the  number  of  parcels  per  holding  has  been  declining:  5.7  in  1961  -  1962;  4  in  1982;  2  in  1992. 
Thus,  theoretically  there  is  little  justification  for  consolidation  in  the  usual  manner.  But  the  numbers  of 
holdings  smaller  than  1  ha  and  especially  those  smaller  than  0.5  ha  have  been  increasing  over  the 
decades.  This  process  causes  concern.  One  successful  approach  has  been  taken  by  a  few  groups  of 
small  and  marginal  farmers  in  Karnataka  and  Maharashtra.  These  farmers  came  together  to  cultivate  a 
particular  crop (strawberries, tomatoes, gherkins or  rose onions) on  a contract  basis  with a price for  the 
produce agreed  in advance with the contractor. They could therefore overcome the viability threshold to 
cultivate  such  investment-intensive  crops.  This  experiment  provides  an  institutional  alternative  to 
consolidation of holdings. 
TABLE  4 
Lorenz ratios for operational and ownership holdings across states 
State  Operational holdings  Ownership holdings 
 
1953 - 54 1971 - 72 1991 - 92 1953 - 54 1971 - 72 1991 - 92 
Andhra Pradesh  0.64  0.60  0.58  0.80  0.73  0.71 
Assam  0.46  0.42  0.49  0.74  0.62  0.56 
Bihar  0.57  0.55  0.64  0.70  0.62  0.69 
Gujarat  0.58  0.54  0.59  0.72  0.69  0.71 
Haryana  0.52  0.44  0.68  0.76  0.68  0.68 
Karnataka  0.58  0.53  0.61  0.72  0.66  0.66 
Kerala  0.64  0.61  0.64  0.79  0.67  0.67 
Madhya Pradesh 0.56  0.53  0.56  0.71  0.62  0.65 
Maharashtra  0.58  0.53  0.60  0.74  0.68  0.71 
Orissa  0.58  0.50  0.51  0.68  0.63  0.66 
Punjab  0.52  0.44  0.73  0.76  0.78  0.76 
Rajasthan  0.57  0.62  0.61  0.69  0.61  0.65 
Tamil Nadu  0.61  0.51  0.65  0.79  0.74  0.77 
Uttar Pradesh  0.51  0.49  0.57  0.64  0.63  0.63 
West Bengal  0.56  0.48  0.58  0.73  0.66  0.67 
All-India  0.62  0.59  0.64  0.75  0.71  0.71 
Sources for data: (i) Reports on Landholdings (3 &4);  8th Round 1953  - 54, NSS Report No. 36 and 66. 
(ii) Report on Some Aspects of Landholdings; 26th Round 1971 - 72, NSS Report No. 215. (iii) Report on 
Some Aspects of Household Ownership Landholdings (1); 48th Round, 1991 - 92, Report No. 399. 
POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC ASPECTS OF LAND OWNERSHIP 
In India, land has always been associated with social status and has historically remained in the control of 
certain social groups. Social stratification is strong  in  India and  is based on the  caste system. The main 
caste groups are Brahmin, Vaishya, Kshatriya and Shudra, and each main group consists of hundreds of 
subcastes. Some groups are not included in this classification, especially the tribals and other groups with 
limited  access  to  productive  resources.  The  caste  groups  are  associated  with  specific  occupations  and 
work; hence, they can be categorized into land-associated castes and other castes. The land-associated 
castes are usually the traditional cultivators. The social structure in terms of caste itself was geared to the 
mandatory  segregation  of  groups  associated  with  cultivation,  trade,  teaching  along  with  priesthood  and 
other  services.  This  segregation  of  social  structure  was  associated  not  only  with  the  political  base,  but 
also  with  the  landownership  pattern  in  the  country.  The  power  relationship  derived  advantage  from  this 
social  segregation,  and  the  emergence  of  political  power  in  the  country  can  be  easily  associated  with 
caste groups. Although land reforms became a prominent post-Independence policy initiative (in order to 
keep the commitment made by many of the leaders of the independence movement), the landassociated 
caste  groups  wielded  significant  political  power  after  Independence,  so  the  very  interests  of  those 
responsible  for  lawmaking  were  tied  with  the  implementation  of  the  law.  Naturally,  as  a  result  the 
landreform  laws  were  either  not  thoroughly  implemented  or  were  manipulated  with  the  help  of 
administering institutions (Deshpande, 1998). 
In the course of the last five decades all social groups have confronted the process of shrinking holding 
sizes,  but  the  politically  weak felt  it more  acutely.  It  must  be  noted  here  that  the  Scheduled  Castes  and 
Scheduled Tribes are the groups that have the highest concentration of poor in India. It can be observed 
that  the  share  of  landholdings  belonging  to  Scheduled  Castes  is  declining  at  a  sharper  rate  than  the 
general trend. Marginalization is a clear phenomenon in this group. Furthermore, their participation in the 
land-lease  market  is  also  marginal  and  concentrated  on  small  fragments  of  land.  Only  82  000  ha  were 
leased by the cultivators belonging to the Scheduled Castes in 1990  - 91, which is about 0.62 percent of 
their  total  operated  area.  Of  this,  more  than  34  percent  comes  under  the  marginal  farmers'  group.  The 
tenancy  contracts  are  generally  constructed  in  terms  of  share  of  produce  or  fixed  money  rent.  The 
number of holdings under the group defined as marginal farmers is increasing and that under the group 
large holdings is declining. The number of marginal farmers with less than 1 ha belonging to Scheduled 
Castes,  however,  is  increasing  much  faster  than  those  in  other  social  groups.  Moreover,  the  number  of 
small  farmers  (those  owning  1  -  2  ha)  belonging  to  Scheduled  Castes  is  declining,  while  the  number  of 
small farmers belonging to other social groups is increasing. This is clearly reflected in the average size of 
holding,  which  is  decreasing  more  rapidly  for  Scheduled  Caste  households  than  for  other  social  groups 
(Table  5).  The  sharp  decline  in  the  land  base  of  the  Scheduled  Caste  is  quite  alarming,  and  has 
happened even in the presence of legislation, which makes the land transfers from Scheduled Castes to 
other castes difficult. 
TABLE  5 
Distribution of ownership holding among weaker sections 
Size class  Scheduled Caste Scheduled Tribe  Others 
 
1982  1992  1982  1992  1982  1992 
Marginal (less than 1 ha)  26.6  30.2  12.0  18.7  10.9  14.9 
Small (1 to 2 ha)  22.71  22.2  18.8  22.7  15.6  17.5 
Medium (2 to 4 ha)  24.0  20.4  29.2  27.7  22.6  24.7 
Large (above 4 ha)  26.8  27.2  40.0  30.9  50.9  42.9 
Total  100.0  100.0  100.0  100.0 100.0 100.0 
Source:  NSS,  Land  Holding  Survey  37th  round  No.  330  1982  &  48th  round  No.  399  1992,  Central 
Statistical Organisation, Delhi. 
LAND: POVERTY AND POLICY ISSUES 
In  the  context  of  globalization,  it  is  clear  that  the  small  and  marginal  farmers  are  handicapped  when  it 
comes to participation in domestic and foreign markets. Their competitiveness is hampered by the crops 
they produce, by market imperfections and by a lack of access to available information. Other factors that 
inhibit  India's  farmers  in  competitive  world  markets  include  the  small  size  of  landholdings  and  low 
throughput of production. It is difficult for the small and marginal farmers to grow the commodities that are 
in  demand  in  the  world  market,  mainly  because  of  the  high  cost  of  cultivation  of  these  goods  and  their 
limited  knowledge  of  them.  In  order  to  overcome  this  problem  it  is  important  to  encourage  entrepreneur 
groups (as suggested earlier), which can take the risk of competing to grow the crops with a domestic and 
international demand. 
Although there is no direct correlation between land-policy initiatives and agricultural growth, the available 
evidence  may  not  be  significant  enough  to  suggest  a  relationship.  However,  oppressive  land  relations 
were  certainly  barriers  to  growth,  and  land  reforms  have  created  preconditions  favourable  for  growth. 
Because the majority of India's population depend upon land for their livelihood, poverty issues are also 
closely  associated  with  land  policy.  Besley  and  Burgess  (2000)  gave  robust  evidence  of  a  link  between 
poverty  reduction  owing  to  tenancy  reforms  and  abolition  of  intermediaries.  They  also  inferred  that  land 
reforms  also  benefited  the  landless.  A  reconciliation  of  this  with  the  process  of  the  marginalization  of 
landholdings  in  rural  India  is,  however,  an  analytically  challenging  task.  The  dilemma  is  this:  reform 
measures  have  helped  in  poverty  reduction,  but  the  average  size  of  a  poor  landowner's  holdings  has 
decreased. Further evidence in this context is V.M. Rao's pertinent observation: 
"This  identification  is  based  on  three  premises  about  the  role  of  land  reforms  and  common  lands  in  the 
emerging development strategy. First, they have to serve as a link helping  integration of growth policies 
with poverty alleviation programmes. Such integration is necessary to focus the development strategy as 
a  whole  -  and  not  merely  the  individual  schemes  and  programmes  -  on  the  rural  laborers  and  poor. 
Second,  at  the  ground  level,  land  reforms  and  improved  access  to  common  lands  need  to  be  part  of  a 
package of measures specifically designed to the requirement of different subgroups of rural laborers and 
poor. Third, the ultimate goal of land reforms and other structural reforms is to promote the emergence of 
a viable and modernized peasantry consisting of small farmers and providing as much room as possible 
for the landless to enter the peasant sector." 
(Rao, 1990) 
Therefore, even though  a  direct relationship between land  policy  and  poverty cannot be established, an 
influence can be inferred. 
The  poor  in  rural  India  are  located  mostly  among  the  landless  agricultural  labourers,  and  marginal  and 
smallholder farmers. NSS data (Rao, 1992) indicate that landlessness is the best predictor for poverty in 
India. In a cross-section analysis of the states in India, the empirical data suggest that marginalization is 
fast increasing. Trends differ across various regions and social groups, but it is clear that the landbased 
poor are becoming poorer because of marginalization. India's land policy interventions during the last five 
decades can be assessed based on their impact on various parameters, including alleviation of poverty, 
conflict  management  and  equity,  sustainable  economic  development,  environmental  impact,  and 
production  efficiency.  The  land  policy  interventions  have  had  varying  impacts  across  the  states, 
depending in large part on the agrarian situation and the extent to which a given policy was implemented. 
Table 6 presents perceptions gathered from the literature about various policy interventions (Joshi, 1975, 
1987;  Appu,  1996;  Mearns,  1999;  Sinha  and  Pushpendra,  2000;  Das,  2000;  and  various  state  volumes 
published  by  Sage  publications  under  the  series  edited  by  Yugandhar  and  others).  Table  6  ranks  the 
overall  impact  using  a  three-point  scale  namely  significant  (sig),  negligible  (neg)  and  partial  (par).  An 
important limitation of this approach is the subjectivity associated with the judgement. 
Poverty alleviation could be significantly impacted by the first three phases of land reform, but the DPAP 
and DADP have made little inroad. Similar results are seen in respect of conflict management and equity, 
but a significant change was recorded in this area because of the computerization of land records. DADP, 
DPAP and Wasteland Development Programmes could impact environmental management significantly. 
Similarly, these could influence sustainable growth in some pockets. The major contributor to sustainable 
growth  came,  however,  from  the  abolition  of  intermediaries  and  the  ceiling  on  land  holdings,  which 
together  have  put  a  pressure  on  economic  use  of  resources. While  production  efficiency  is  not  a  direct 
derivative  of  land  policy,  its  components  can  help.  The  abolition  of  intermediaries,  land  ceilings  and  the 
consolidation  of  holdings  (wherever  it  could  be  done)  have  certainly  contributed.  The  Watershed 
Development Programme has been one of the important land policy interventions in the recent past and 
has  impacted  poverty  alleviation,  conflict  management  and  environmental  management  significantly. 
However,  its  influence  on  production  efficiency  was  not  very  significant  (Deshpande  and 
Narayanamoorthy, 1999). 
Land quality issues  dominated  policymaking during the 1980s  and continued thereafter. Initially, the soil 
and  water  conservation  programmes  were  undertaken  in  a  few  selected  states  to  merge  into  the  wider 
National Watershed Development 
TABLE  6 
Policy interventions and their perceived impact 
Policy interventions  Poverty 
alleviation 
Conflict 
management/ 
equity 
Environmental 
management 
Sustainable 
economic 
growth 
Production 
efficiency 
Abolition of intermediaries  Sig  Sig  Par  Sig  Sig 
Tenancy reforms  Sig  Sig  Neg  Par  Sig 
Ceiling on size of holding  Sig  Sig  Neg  Sig  Par 
Consolidation of holdings  Neg  Neg  Par  Par  Sig 
Computerization of land 
records 
Neg  Sig  Neg  Neg  Par 
Drought-Prone Area 
Development Programme 
(DPAP) and Desert 
Development Programme 
(DDP) 
Par  Neg  Sig  Sig  Par 
Watershed Development 
Programme 
Sig  Sig  Sig  Par  Par 
Wasteland development  Par  Neg  Sig  Par  Par 
Note: impact levels are perceived as Sig, significant; Par, partial; Neg, negligible. 
Programme  for  Rainfed  Agriculture.  This  stemmed  from  a  mid-term  appraisal  of  the  Seventh  Plan  and 
continued  thereafter.  Even  though  the  main  focus  of  the  programme  was  to  conserve  soil  and  water 
resources, increases in income and productivity were an essential component. 
The programme went through a phased implementation, various models of which operate throughout the 
country: 
1. A state-implemented programme with the help of existing line departments, focusing more on technical 
parameters. 
2.  A  state  -  non-governmental  organization  (NGO)  partnership,  largely  implemented  by  the  latter.  This 
model allows a good institutional set up and focuses on people's livelihoods. Its flexibility is also one of its 
constraints. 
3. Experiments outside of the ambit of state agencies, funded and implemented by NGOs. 
The watershed development initiatives have had an impact on the quality of land as well as on the income 
of the beneficiaries. However, their impact on a sustainable environmental system is not very significant 
or at least not well documented (Deshpande and Narayanamoorthy, 1999). The DDP has been effective 
in certain pockets but the wasteland development initiatives have yet to make a significant mark. Bearing 
in  mind  the  longer  gestation  period  of  these  interventions,  it  would  be  misleading  to  consider  tangible 
benefits alone. Other positive benefits of such programmes may be considerable. 
A  systematic  forest  policy  in  India  dates  back  to  1855  when  Dietrich  Brandis,  a  German  botanist,  was 
appointed  as  the  first  Inspector  General  of  Forests  in  India.  The  purpose  was  to  bring  the  commercial 
exploitation of forests under state control. The first Forest Act came into being in 1865; this gave power to 
the  state  to  declare  any  land  cover  with  trees  as  government  forest  by  notification.  The  profitability  and 
growing commercial potential of the forest caused a further amendement to in the Forest Act of 1878. The 
Indian Forest Act was passed in 1927; it tried to make the law uniform in different regions of the country. 
However, Provincial laws were coexisting with the Central law. The 1927 Forest Act was the baseline for 
independent India's forest policy. Until 1988, forest was considered as the sole property of the state, and 
state had all the rights to manage and appropriate the revenue generated from forests. However, with the 
emergence of the concept of joint forest management (JFM) and community forest management (CFM), 
management  and  revenue-sharing  with  the  local  people  (often  through  Panchayat  or  similar  parallel 
political  institutions)  was  considered  by  many  states  as  a  method  of  involving  people  and  giving  them 
rights  on  the  forest  resources.  The  main  emphasis  of  the  1988  Forest  Policy  was  to  halve  forest 
degradation, retaining as well as enhancing the quality of land use in this sector. The policy also aims to 
create a partnership between forest dwellers and forest development authorities. 
Women  in  India  have  traditionally  been  deprived  of  property  rights.  The  Hindu  Succession  Act  of  1956 
provided property rights to the daughters, widow or mother of a dying property owner. Women's property 
rights still meet with strong social opposition and even now the rights are not easily transferred. Gender 
equity  in  land  rights  is  promoted  on  the  basis  of  welfare,  efficiency,  equity  and  empowerment  (Mearns, 
1999).  The  Eighth  Plan  (1990  -  95)  called  for  providing  gender  rights  and  asked  the  states  to  make 
provision in the Land Ceiling Act. 
CURRENT PHASE 
Independent  departments  at  federal  and  state  government  levels  handle  land  and  agricultural 
administration. In one way, this helps to monitor land outside agricultural use separately from agricultural 
land,  but  the  lack  of  integration  creates  uneasy  administrative  regimes.  Moreover,  there  are  several 
different  departments  responsible  for  various  aspects  of  land  administration,  land  data,  and  land 
legislation.  Unfortunately,  these  do  not  work  with  perfect  coordination,  which  gives  rise  to  various 
problems. The  spread  of  administrative  regimes makes  land-policy  decision-making  and  implementation 
difficult. 
The Department of Land Resources in the Central Ministry of Rural Development has the primary central 
government  responsibility  for  addressing  issues  related  to  land  administration,  particularly  of  degraded 
land. This department oversees a range of programmes that set the national framework. The Department 
of  Land  Resources  also  works  as  an  advisory  and  coordinating  body  for  the  implementation  of  land 
reform, and helps in arriving at a consensus among states on the changing emphasis in land reform. For 
example, recently the Department of Land Resources convened a national workshop focused on tenancy 
reform, which drew together a group of experts to review the current situation in land policy. The question 
of opening of the leasing market was debated and there was a general consensus that the leasing of land 
should  be  liberalized.  However,  no  firm  decisions  were  made  in  the  workshop.  Subsequently,  however, 
the  National  Agricultural  Policy  focused  for  the  first  time  on  the  policy  of  leasing  and  suggested  a 
liberalization of leasing legislation, an increase in land ceilings, and allowing for contract farming. 
The  Department  of  Land  Resources  at  the  central  level  also  issues  guidelines  for  strengthening  land 
revenue  administration  and  updating  land  records.  It  has  recently  initiated  a  large-scale  programme  for 
computerizing  land  records.  The  department  has  also  initiated  various  activities  focused  on  wasteland 
(droughtprone  areas,  desert  development,  integrated  wasteland  development,  technology  development, 
extension  and  training,  investment  promotion  and  support  for  NGOs/voluntary  organizations  for  such 
activities). 
It  is  now  accepted  in  India  that  the  recording  of  land  rights,  and  their  periodic  updating,  is  an  essential 
prerequisite  for  an  effective  land  policy.  During  the  Seventh  Plan  Period  (1997  -  98)  a  Centrally 
Sponsored  Scheme  on  Computerization  of  Land  Records  (CLR)  was  introduced  with  100  percent 
financial assistance from the Central Government for pilot projects in a few selected districts (Gulbarga in 
Karnataka,  Rangareddy  in  Andhra  Pradesh,  Sonitpur  in  Assam,  Singhbhum  in  Bihar,  Gandhinagar  in 
Gujarat,  Morena  in  Madhya  Pradesh,  Wardha  in  Maharashtra,  Mayurbhanj  in  Orissa,  and  Dungarpur  in 
Rajasthan).  These  pilots  were  undertaken  with  a  view  to  removing  problems  inherent  in  the  manual 
maintenance  and  updating  of  land  records,  and  to  ensure  the  issue  of  timely  and  accurate  copies  of 
Records of Rights to landowners by  the  local land revenue  officials. The main objectives of the scheme 
were  to:  (1)  computerize  ownership  and  plot-wise  details  for  issue  of  timely  and  accurate  copy  of  the 
Records of Rights to the landowners; (2) achieve low-cost, easily reproducible storage media for reliable 
and long-term preservation of land records; (3) provide fast and efficient retrieval of textual and graphical 
information; (4) create a Land Information System (LIS) and database for the agricultural census. By the 
end of the Eighth Plan (1997), 323 districts in the country were to be brought under the computerization of 
land  records  scheme.  During  the  first  year  of  the  Ninth  Plan  (1997  -  98),  177  new  project  districts  were 
covered.  The  available  feedback  from  our  fieldwork  and  other  sources  clearly  indicate  that  the  scheme 
has  been  slow  to  progress.  Many  bottlenecks  are  also  emerging  in  the  process,  including:  (1)  delayed 
transfer  of funds  to  the  final  implementing  authority  in  the  field  by  the  state  governments;  (2)  a  delay  in 
the  development  of  appropriate  software  tailored  for  the  specific  requirements  of  different  states;  (3)  a 
lack  of  adequate  training  facilities  to  the  revenue  staff  who  handle  computers  in  the  field  areas;  and  (4) 
unavailability  of  private  vendors  to  enter  data.  In  addition  to  these,  an  administrative  system  for  the 
computerization  has  not  been  clearly  set  up.  It  is  operated  under  the  state-government  revenue 
departments, sometimes with only partially trained staff. Therefore, a quantum change in this process is 
needed. 
Proper land records continue to be a major problem even after five decades of land policy interventions. 
Computerization  alone  may  not  solve  the  problem  and  land  surveys  involve  heavy  costs.  The  body 
appointed  by  the  Planning  Commission  recommended  the  Torrens  System  for  land  records  in  order  to 
provide  clear  title  to  land.  The  Government  of  Maharashtra  has  taken  steps  to  introduce  the  Torrens 
System on a pilot basis. The scheme provides for the conversion of the present presumptive titles to land 
into conclusive titles, which requires the updating and publication of the Records of Rights. The scheme is 
being implemented in two districts and the pilot process may come out with a fool-proof scheme. 
TOWARDS THE NEXT PHASE 
In  recent  years,  the  government's  land  policy  interventions  have  focused  on  the  correction  and 
computerization  of  land  records,  improving  the  land  survey  process,  and  improving  land  quality  through 
the reclamation of degraded wasteland and forests. Land reform implementation is almost thinning out as 
a priority. In fact, the important policy discussions now centre on whether certain land-reform interventions 
should  be  reversed;  particularly  whether  the  land  ceilings  should  be  increased  and  whether  tenancy 
restrictions  should  be  liberalized.  Marginalization  of  land  holdings  and  land  administration  are  also  of 
major concern. 
Policy discussions concerning rolling back land ceiling laws have assumed prominence. It is argued that 
the  current  ceiling  limits  hinder  investment  in  agriculture  and  diversification  to  high-tech  agriculture.  It  is 
questioned that there are no limits on investment in other sectors, yet agriculturalists face a restriction on 
increasing  the  size  of  holding.  Added  to  this  the  average  size  of  holding  is  sliding  down  in  successive 
censuses because of nationalization of the smaller holdings. Putting a bottom ceiling on the smallest size 
is worth considering given the present political and administrative climate in the country; rolling back the 
land  ceiling  limits  seems  to  be  a  difficult  political  option.  It  is  argued  that  economies  of  scale  could  be 
achieved  by  allowing  larger  holdings  and  that  large  farms  would  also  attract  greater  investment  in  the 
agriculture  sector.  This  is  necessary  before  it  is  possible  to  generate  an  exportable  surplus  and  to 
participate effectively in the world market. Pooling small farms together to form formal or informal groups 
of  producers  for  purposes  of  marketing  may  be  a  way  to  achieve  this  goal.  This  was  successfully 
attempted in Karnataka, growing rose onions and gherkins for export. 
The second policy option being actively discussed in a countrywide debate is the desirability of liberalizing 
the  current  restrictions  (sometimes  prohibitions)  on  agricultural  tenancy.  The  argument  that  liberalizing 
tenancy  restrictions  will  have  a  pro-poor  impact  has  gained  ground.  It  is  felt  that  a  majority  of  the 
beneficiaries  from  tenancy  liberalization  will  be  small  and  marginal  farmers.  Presently,  most  concealed 
tenancies  give  no  protection  for  the  tenant  or  the  landlord.  Moreover,  informal  (or  concealed)  tenants 
cannot gain access to capital from banks and financial institutions. A recent study of a spate of farmers' 
suicides in Karnataka found that many of them were informal tenants who borrowed from moneylenders 
and  could  not  pay  back  because  of  high  interest  rates  (Deshpande,  2002).  Legalizing  tenancy  will  also 
help  to  bring  the  small  and  marginal  tenants  within  the  ambit  of  institutional  credit.  If  legal  status  is 
conferred on the tenant, this may not leave room for imperfections in the tenancy market usually caused 
by concealed tenancy and unilateral fixation of land rent. It is also expected that opening the lease market 
will  attract  much-needed  private  investment  in  agriculture.  It  may  be  possible  to  prevent  possible 
imperfections  by  restricting  the  upper  limit  and  allowing  leasing  of  land  up  to  that  limit.  The  limit  should 
also serve as a threshold to allow only those who have ownership of land below such a limit. Similarly, the 
tenant  as  well  as  the  owner  should  have  a  guarantee  of  protection  of  their  interests.  Interestingly,  the 
National Commission on Agriculture referred in 1976 to the need for new amendments in tenancy reform 
to overcome the problems of concealed tenancy as  well as reverse tenancy (NCA, 1976, pp. 159  -  60). 
Leasing  in  land  belonging  to  the  disempowered  people  should  be  regulated,  with  a  proper  intervening 
authority to help protect them from unscrupulous dealings 
CONSPECTUS 
Land policy in post-Independence India has evolved through different phases. These include: two phases 
of land reform; attention to issues pertaining to quality of land through the Drought-Prone Area and Desert 
Development  Programmes,  Wasteland  Development  and  Watershed  Development  Programmes 
designed to reclaim environmentally degraded land. These policy interventions have had varying impacts 
on poverty and the overall development process. It is difficult empirically to segregate the influence of the 
changes  in  land  policy  on  poverty,  environmental  management,  sustainability  and  production,  but 
available studies indicate that land-reform measures have had a significant impact on equity and poverty. 
The  measures  dealing  with  the  quality  of  land  have  a  partial  to  significant  impact  on  environmental 
parameters. In addition to these, other land-policy instruments were used for the purpose of transforming 
development policy effectively. In the previous section we have indicated the key areas for the purpose of 
action  and  major  policy  interventions  required.  The  key  areas  for  future  land  policy  action  include 
legalizing  the  tenancy  market,  contract  farming,  and  watershed  and  wasteland  development  to  assume 
greater  significance.  Such  interventions  involve  important  implementation  issues  relating  to  the  political 
economic  aspects  of  the  reform  measures  and  reform  of  the  institutions.  Future  research  should  be 
directed  towards  establishing  the  institutional  framework  to  fit  these  issues  into  a  broader  policy-making 
process. 
Acknowledgments 
Thanks are due to the anonymous referees for very useful comments, and to Mr Amalendu Jyotishi and 
Mr Mohan Kumar for help in word processing. 
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[97]
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are those of the authors and are made available here for purposes of 
discussion only. They may not represent the views of the institutions they are 
affiliated with or the World Bank, its Board of Executive Directors, and the 
countries they represent.