Answer:
Approach:
Introduction
- Give a brief about land reforms
Body
- Establish relationship between land reforms, agriculture productivity and elimination of poverty
- Mention difficulties in planning and executing agri-friendly land reforms.
Conclusion
- Mention that India should now move towards the second generation of land reforms focused on digitization and financial inclusion.
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Introduction:
Land reform refers to efforts to reform ownership, operation, leasing, sales, and property rights of land in India. The Indian Government was committed to land reforms and to ensure distributive justice as was promised during the freedom struggle. Post Independent India has seen movements like Bhoodan and Gramdan which were persuasive in nature. Later, laws were passed by Governments for abolishing landlordism, distributing land through imposition of ceilings, protection of tenants and consolidation of land-holdings.
Land reforms play a crucial role in agricultural development as they can increase land productivity, reduce poverty, and promote economic growth.
Body:
Relationship between land reforms, agriculture productivity and elimination of poverty:
- Improved Land Productivity: Land reforms can increase land productivity by providing small and marginal farmers with more land, improving access to credit and technology, and increasing the efficiency of land use.
- Reduced Poverty: Increased agricultural growth and productivity and thus enhanced farmers’ income due to land reforms is directly related to rural poverty reduction.
- Promotes Economic Growth: Land reforms can promote economic growth by increasing agricultural production and providing more employment opportunities.
- Land reform leads to increased rural agricultural wages that help in ensuring more income to the rural landless labourers and thus crucial to rural poverty reduction.
Difficulties in designing and implementation of agriculture-friendly land reforms in India.
- Poor land records: The major obstacle to the failure of land reforms is the lack of concurrent evaluation and reliable (current) records. The lack of documents makes reforms very difficult.
- Implementation issues: Under Land Ceiling, Benami transaction ensured control of landlords over the lands.
- Lack of political will: As most of the large landholders had considerable political hold in most States, they ensured that land reforms did not alter their property holdings in any meaningful way.
- Surplus land is fallow and uncultivable land: Surplus land owners manipulate land data so that the excess land in their possession is usually barren and uncultivable and of no use to landless peasants.
- Legal issues: Land reforms has been a lengthy and cumbersome process due to many cases of litigation. The inheritance laws led to further division and fragmentation thereby reducing the land-holding size.
Conclusion:
Land reforms play a crucial role in agricultural development, as they can increase land productivity, reduce poverty, and promote economic growth. Land reforms must be properly implemented for them to succeed. India should now move towards the second generation of land reforms focused on digitization and financial inclusion.
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