Khaleej Times

Landless poor can benefit from public land bank, feel experts

- Reuters

new delhi — A public land bank that accepts deposits of land, from those who do not wish to cultivate it and lends to those with little or no land, can be an effective way to address rural landlessne­ss in India, according to a leading analyst.

A land bank with incentives based on the tenure of the deposit and the size of the holding can also help increase crop output and rural incomes in the country, said Bina Agarwal, a professor at the University of Manchester.

“Creating a public land bank at the village level is a simple and effective way to regulate rural land demand and supply,” she said on a visit to New Delhi.

“It gets around the fear of loss of ownership from leasing out land, yet delivers similar benefits, and it won’t cost much to set up.”

More than 56 per cent of rural households in India own no land, according to official data.

The average size of land holdings is 1.15 hectare, with more than two-thirds of owners holding fewer than 4 hectares of cultivable land.

The northern state of Haryana is considerin­g a land bank to buy land from willing farmers for industrial use to avert conflicts.

Agarwal, who led a working group that recommende­d a statebacke­d land bank, said the priority should be lending to small and marginal farmers, and landless minority groups. A public land bank has many advantages, but implementa­tion would be tricky as it would need a mediating agency, said T. Haque, chairman of the land policy cell in NITI Aayog, a government think tank.

“So we are in favour of a model land leasing law instead. Anyone can lease out, anyone can lease in, and there’s no middleman.”

The model Land Leasing Act aims at giving poor tenant farmers greater access to benefits such as credit while also protecting the rights of land owners. —

 ?? AFP file ?? The model Land Leasing Act aims at giving poor tenant farmers greater access to benefits. —
AFP file The model Land Leasing Act aims at giving poor tenant farmers greater access to benefits. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates