The Vice
chairman of NITI Aayog, Arvind Panagariya has said that states wishing to
facilitate industrialization can further benefit from liberal land leasing if
they simultaneously liberalize the use of agricultural land for
non-agricultural purposes. He shared the views with the people in his blog post
published on the website of NITI Aayog in New Delhi today. The full text of the
blog post is as follows and can also be accessed at www.niti.gov.in.
“ Land
leasing laws relating to rural agricultural land in Indian states were
overwhelmingly enacted during decades immediately following the independence.
At the time, the abolition of Zamindari and redistribution of land to the
tiller were the highest policy priorities. Top leadership of the day saw
tenancy and sub-tenancy as integral to the feudal land arrangements that India
had inherited from the British. Therefore, tenancy reform laws that various
states adopted sought to not only transfer ownership rights to the tenant but
also either prohibited or heavily discouraged leasing and sub-leasing of land.
Politically
influential landowners were successful in subverting the reform, however. As
P.S. Appu documents in his brilliant 1996 book Land Reforms in India, till as
late as 1992, ownership rights were transferred to the cultivator on just 4% of
the operated land. Moreover, just seven states, Assam, Gujarat, Himachal
Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Maharashtra, and West Bengal, accounted for some
97% of this transfer.
In
trying to force the transfer of ownership to the cultivator, many states
abolished tenancy altogether. But while resulting in minimal land transfer, the
policy had the unintended consequence of ending any protection tenants might
have had and forced future tenants underground. Some states allowed tenancy but
imposed a ceiling on land rent at one-fourth to one-fifth of the produce. But
since this rent fell well below the market rate, contracts became oral in these
states as well, with the tenant paying closer to 50% of the produce in rent.
Many
large states including Telangana, Bihar, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh and Uttar
Pradesh ban land leasing with exceptions granted to landowners among widows,
minors, disabled and defence personnel. Kerala has for long banned tenancy,
permitting only recently self-help groups to lease land. Some states including
Punjab, Haryana, Gujarat, Maharashtra and Assam do not ban leasing but the
tenant acquires a right to purchase the leased land from the owner after a specified
period of tenancy. This provision too has the effect of making tenancy
agreements oral, leaving the tenant vulnerable. Only the states of Andhra
Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Rajasthan and West Bengal have liberal tenancy laws with
the last one limiting tenancy to sharecroppers. A large number of states among
them Rajasthan and Tamil Nadu, which otherwise have liberal tenancy laws, do
not recognize sharecroppers as tenants.
The
original intent of the restrictive tenancy laws no longer holds any relevance.
Today, these restrictions have detrimental effects on not only the tenant for
whose protection the laws were originally enacted but also on the landowner and
implementation of public policy. The tenant lacks the security of tenure that
she would have if laws permitted her and the landowner to freely write
transparent contracts. In turn, this discourages her from making long-term
investments in land and also leaves her feeling perpetually insecure about
continuing to maintain cultivation rights. Furthermore, it deprives her of
potential access to credit by virtue of being a cultivator. Landowner also
feels a sense of insecurity when leasing land with many choosing to leave land
fallow. The latter practice is becoming increasingly prevalent with landowners
and their children seeking non-farm employment.
Public
policy too faces serious challenges today in the absence of transparent land
leasing laws. There are calls for expanded and more effective crop insurance.
Recognizing that such insurance is likely to be highly subsidized, as has been
the case with the past programmes, a natural question is how to ensure that the
tenant who bears the bulk of the risk of cultivation receives this benefit. The
same problem arises in the face of a natural calamity; if tenancy is informal,
how do we ensure that the actual cultivator receives disaster relief.
In a
similar vein, fertilizer subsidy today is subject to vast leakages and sales of
subsidized fertilizer in the black market. In principle, these leakages could
be sharply curtailed by the introduction of direct benefit transfer (DBT) using
Aadhar seeded bank accounts along the lines of the cooking gas subsidy
transfer. But in face of difficulty in identifying the real cultivator and
therefore intended beneficiary, DBT cannot be satisfactorily implemented.
In
the context of the difficulties in land acquisition under the 2013 land
acquisition law, states wishing to facilitate industrialization can further
benefit from liberal land leasing if they simultaneously liberalize the use of
agricultural land for non-agricultural purposes. Currently, conversion of
agricultural land for non-agricultural use requires permission from the
appropriate authority, which can take a long time. State governments can
address this barrier by either an amendment of the law to permit
non-agricultural use or by the introduction of time-bound clearances of
applications for the conversion of agricultural land use in the implementing
regulations. The reform open up another avenue to the provision of land for
industrialization: long-term land leases that allow the owner to retain the
ownership while earning rent on her land. In addition, she will have the right
to renegotiate the terms of the lease once the existing lease expires.
Therefore,
the introduction of transparent land leasing laws that allow the potential
tenant or sharecropper to engage in written contracts with the landowner is a
win-win reform. The tenant will have an incentive to make investment in
improvement of land, landowner will be able to lease land without fear of
losing it to the tenant and the government will be able to implement its
policies efficiently. Simultaneous liberalization of land use laws will also
open up an alternative avenue to the provision of land for industrialization that
is fully within the state’s jurisdiction and allows the landowner to retain
ownership of her land.
A
potential hurdle to the land leasing reform laws is that landowners may fear
that a future populist government may use the written tenancy contracts as the
basis of transfer of land to the tenant and therefore would oppose the reform.
This is a genuine fear but may be addressed in two alternative ways. The ideal
way would be yet another major reform: giving landowners indefeasible titles.
States such as Karnataka that have fully digitized land records and the
registration system are indeed in a position to move in this direction. For
other states, such titles are a futuristic solution. Therefore, in the interim,
they can opt for the alternative solution of recording the contracts at the
level of the Panchayat eschewing acknowledging the tenant in the revenue
records. They may then insert in the relevant implementing regulations the
clause that for purposes of ownership transfer, only the tenancy status in
revenue records would be recognized.
State
governments must seriously consider revisiting their leasing (and land use)
laws to determine if they could bring about these simple but powerful changes
to enhance productivity and welfare all around. We, at the NITI Aayog, stand
ready to assist them in this endeavour.”
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AKT/NCJ