Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access

Political Economy of Land Policy in India


Affiliations
1 Justice K. S. Hegde Institute of Management, Nitte, India
 

Land is a factor of production like labour and capital but it is non-renewable natural resource and fixed in supply. With economic development, it has growing and competing demands. Hence, its access and efficient use for both agricultural and non-agricultural purposes become critical. Land policy in India is historically governed by ideology and political interests. Agricultural land reform policies led to present agrarian structure characterized by marginalization of land holdings, emergence of noncultivating owners and increasing current fallows. Policy on land acquisition for non-agricultural use is outdated and has emerged as a major contentious issue. An appropriate land policy and enabling legal and institutional framework is essential for achieving higher and sustainable economic development in India. This paper, therefore, examines political economy of land policy since independence and makes an attempt to bring out emerging issues and challenges pertaining to land policy for both agriculture and non-agricultural use from future economic development perspective.

Keywords

Agrarian Structure, Land Policy, Land Reforms.
User
Notifications
Font Size


  • Appu PS. Land reforms in India. New Delhi: Vikas Publishing House; 1996.
  • Bhagwati J, Panagariya A. India’s Tryst with Destiny; 2012.
  • Dantwala ML. Agrarian structure and Agrarian relations in India. New Delhi: Indian Agriculture Development since Independence (Ed); 1986.
  • Deshpande RS. Current Land Policy Issues in India, FAO, Current Document Repository.
  • Dutt RP. India Today, Manisha, Calcutta; 1992: PMCid:PMC495318
  • Jenkins, Kennedy, Mukhopadhyay. Power, Policy and Protest: The Politics of India’s Special Economic Zones. New Delhi: Oxford University Press; 2014. https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198097341.001.0001
  • Levien M. Rationalizing dispossession: The land acquisition and resettlement bills. Economic and Political Weekly; 2011 Mar 12.
  • Mukherjee R. Land Problems of India, Manisha, Calcutta; 1933.
  • Nadakarni MV. Land reforms- A bus that India missed which may never come again. Indian Journal of Agricultural Economics. 2002; 57(4).
  • Aayoga N. Report of the Expert Committee on Land Leasing. Government of India; 2016.
  • Rao VM. Land reform experiences: perspective for strategy and programmes. Economic and Political Weekly; 1992 Jun 27.
  • Sathe D. Political Economy of Land and Development in India. Economic and Political Weekly; 2011. Jul 16.
  • Sathe D. Land Acquisition Act and the Ordinance: Some Issues. Economic and Political Weekly. 2015 Jul 4.
  • Sathe D. Land acquisition: Need for a shift in discourse. Economic and Political Weekly. 2016 Dec 17.
  • Singh S. Tenancy reforms: A critique of NITI Aayog’s Model Law. Economic and Political Weekly. 2017. Jan 14.
  • Thorner D. The Agrarian prospects in India. New Delhi; 1976. PMCid:PMC1436117
  • Ramanathan U. Land acquisition, eminent domain and the 2011 Bill. Economic and Political Weekly; 2011 Nov 5.
  • Santosh V. Subverting the land acquisition act 2013. Economic and Political Weekly; 2015 Sept 12.

Abstract Views: 227

PDF Views: 71




  • Political Economy of Land Policy in India

Abstract Views: 227  |  PDF Views: 71

Authors

N. S. Shetty
Justice K. S. Hegde Institute of Management, Nitte, India

Abstract


Land is a factor of production like labour and capital but it is non-renewable natural resource and fixed in supply. With economic development, it has growing and competing demands. Hence, its access and efficient use for both agricultural and non-agricultural purposes become critical. Land policy in India is historically governed by ideology and political interests. Agricultural land reform policies led to present agrarian structure characterized by marginalization of land holdings, emergence of noncultivating owners and increasing current fallows. Policy on land acquisition for non-agricultural use is outdated and has emerged as a major contentious issue. An appropriate land policy and enabling legal and institutional framework is essential for achieving higher and sustainable economic development in India. This paper, therefore, examines political economy of land policy since independence and makes an attempt to bring out emerging issues and challenges pertaining to land policy for both agriculture and non-agricultural use from future economic development perspective.

Keywords


Agrarian Structure, Land Policy, Land Reforms.

References





DOI: https://doi.org/10.18311/nmr%2F2017%2Fv11i1%2F20596