Land reform refers to the systematic alteration of laws, regulations, and practices governing land ownership, distribution, and use to achieve social and economic justice.
Objective of land reforms in India
Reduction in Land Inequality through redistributive justice
Social Justice under Article 38 and 39: Providing land to the landless
Elimination of Feudal Land Ownership – transfer land ownership to actual cultivators.
Enhancing Agricultural Efficiency by restructuring landholding patterns.
Encouraging Cooperative Farming for better resource utilization and economies of scale.
Preventing Exploitation of Tenants – To ensure fair rent, security of tenure, and land rights
To consolidate land holdings and mitigate Land Fragmentation
Prevention of Land Alienation – Eg- Forest Rights Act, 2006.
Poverty Alleviation and improving rural standard of living.
Promote investment in agriculture by removing absentee landlordism.
Measures of land reforms in India
Abolition of Intermediaries through Zamindari Abolition Acts
Total land transferred: 173 lakh hectares
2 crore tenants benefitted.
Tenancy Reforms
It led to fixation of fair rent (usually one-fourth to one-sixth of the produce).
Total tenants who got land rights: 12.5 million (Agricultural Census 1981).
Eg- West Bengal’s Operation Barga (1978)
Ceiling on Land Holdings
Total surplus land declared: 75 lakh hectares
Total land actually distributed: 56 lakh hectares
Land Consolidation measures – Punjab and Haryana enforced compulsory consolidation, while other states allowed voluntary consolidation if the majority of landowners agreed.
Bhoodan-Gramdan Movements – “non-violent revolution” in India’s land reform programme.
16 lakh hectares of land donated under Gramdan
More than 160,000 villages pledged Gramdan by 1970.
Phase 5: Land Records Modernization & Land Leasing Reforms (2000s-Present)
Digitize land records to prevent disputes and ensure transparency.
Land records fully digitized in 92% of villages (as of 2023).
States leading in digitization are Karnataka, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh.
Modernisation of Land Records
Digital India Land Records Modernization Programme – 96% digitization
SVAMITVA Scheme for geo-tagging and property cards in rural India.
Model Land Leasing Act, 2016 (NITI Aayog)
Land Ceiling Policy as an Effective Reform under Economic Criteria
Land redistributed to actual tillers– higher incentives to cultivate efficiently. Smallholder farmers in India achieve higher cropping intensity than large farms.
Multiplier effect – Distribution of land to the poor increases purchasing power, strengthening the rural economy .
Encourages Investment & Sustainable Use – Secure ownership motivates farmers to invest in irrigation, soil health, and technology.
Employment – Smaller farms use labour-intensive methods, creating rural employment.
Ceilings prevent re-concentration of land, supporting long-term agrarian stability.
Increases women land ownership – women hold only 11-13% of operational holdings due to inheritance barriers.
Land reform 2.0 based on modernisation of records (DILRMP), redistribution of land and land leasing reforms is essential to realise the objective of ‘Doubling Farmers Income’.