Demands
for a review or reversal of the land reform law, citing the needs of
industry, are becoming insistent.
It is an irony that the forces taht
have started arguing vociferously for the scapping of the reforms have
themselves drawn their strngth from the very smae sections in soceity
that actually benefitted from land reforms..
Land has become more of a premium “commodity” than a means of
production in Kerala, the State that boasts it has implemented the most
comprehensive land reforms in India, with “equitable distribution of
wealth” and “increase in farm production” as their most important
objectives.
The legislative process to introduce the reforms began in 1957 under
the first communist ministry and had to face several legal and
political hurdles before it lost steam after a much diluted law was
finally put in place in 1970. However, by then it had ended statutory
landlordism and the janmi system and provided security of tenure to
tenants and ownership rights to occupants of homestead lands.
It also imposed limits on land ownership and distributed surplus land
to the landless (though both these measures were not as successful as
they were originally intended to be). It offered tenants protection
from eviction, provided hundreds of families sites for the construction
of houses, and was instrumental in raising rural wages and introducing
minimum wages and social security schemes for agricultural workers.
Without a doubt, it brought down to a great extent economic, class and
caste inequality in Kerala society and became the backbone of what was
later known as the Kerala “model” of development.
But over three decades later, as a direct consequence of the land
reforms, the State (which has a very high population density) finds
itself facing the prospect of extreme fragmentation of landholdings and
the consequent decline in farm production. There has also been a
gradual shift in land ownership from households that have a livelihood
interest in agriculture to those that have no major interest in
cultivation and basically consider land as an additional source of
income, if at all.
Many new owners see the value of land as being much more important to
them than any “additional income” they may get from farm production.
There are also signs that tenancy, prohibited under what has come to be
known as the Kerala Land Reform Act, is reappearing in a big way in the
State and that land ceiling regulations are being flouted with impunity.
The picture (though incomplete) that emerges from recent surveys and
studies of land ownership and distribution patterns in Kerala is
significant. According to one estimate, over 33 per cent, if not more,
of the people in Kerala have no land of their own; they include the
poorest of the poor and the fishing, tribal and Dalit communities.
There is an abnormal concentration of land in the hands of the richest
8.8 per cent of the population.
A study by the Kerala Sastra Sahitya Parishad (KSSP) indicates a
definite trend away from the post-Independence ideal of equitable
distribution of land. Even though the Land Reforms Act prohibits
tenancy, “the simultaneous increase of two categories of people, ‘those
who have land but are unable to cultivate’ and ‘those who have the
labour and the skills, but no lands or not enough lands of their own to
cultivate’”, has led to the re-emergence of illegal tenancies in a big
way, a 2005 study by the Centre for Development Studies indicates.
Lease-land farming is taking place on at least 1.5 lakh hectares in
Kerala, of which Kudumbashree self-help groups are cultivating crops on
over 57,000 acres (23,085 hectares), obviously with government
sanction. Contract farming has also spread in many parts of the State
without legal support. The prevalence of tenancies in the State is
likely to be much higher than the situation revealed by available
surveys. In some regions, for instance, in tribal areas, landlordism of
the most exploitative kind continues unhindered, according to some
scholars.
Of late, easy conclusions that land reforms have failed have been made
and demands for a review or reversal of the reforms, especially
regarding tenancy regulations and land ceiling norms, have become
increasingly frequent and insistent. The latest and most controversial
of such suggestions came in November 2007 from within the State
bureaucracy itself when a senior government official in the Industries
Department proposed the repeal of the Kerala Land Reform Act as a
necessary measure if the State was to progress economically because, he
argued, the Act had achieved its objectives in a remarkable manner and
had outlived its utility.
The note prepared by T. Balakrishnan, Principal Secretary (Industries),
for discussion at a monthly meeting of senior government officials
convened by the Chief Secretary in Thiruvananthapuram triggered
allegations that the proposal would not have been made without the
knowledge of at least a section of the political leadership, even
though Industries Minister Elamaram Kareem described it later as a
“mischievous suggestion”.
Curiously, the note said, among other things: “Even though this
proposal will not affect a large section of people in any way, such a
move may not be to the liking of the general public immediately.
Therefore, widespread discussions have to take place about this
proposal in order to mould public opinion in favour of the repeal of
the law. It is time that we looked beyond land reforms. The government
should don the leadership role as it had done while implementing the
law. However, this time it should be for the repeal of the law.”
It is now well understood that it is in Kerala, more than in States
such as West Bengal or Jammu and Kashmir, that land reforms were
implemented in a wide-ranging manner and that yet the changes that
should have accompanied the reforms failed to materialise in the State.
The long delay in the implementation of the reforms gave many big
landlords ample time to sell their lands or devise other strategies to
circumvent the provisions of the law, for instance, by registering land
in the name of relatives or by utilising provisions such as the
exemption from land ceiling regulations granted to certain types of
plantations.
In short, land reform, though implemented with the intention of
transferring “land to the tiller”, did not really transfer land to
agricultural labourers and poor peasants in Kerala. As many scholars
have pointed out, the further redistribution that ought to have taken
place for the complete success of the land reforms never happened. The
old janmi system was replaced, but by “landlordism of another type”, as
E.M.S. Namboodiripad, under whose leadership the reform process was
launched in 1957, once remarked: the landlordism of tenants who had no
direct dependence on land for their livelihood and who got their land
cultivated through wage labour.
The labourers who really worked on the land for a living did not
benefit much from the reforms and got very little cultivable land. A
number of them only got hutment dwelling rights. Moreover,
technological changes, high-yield seeds and crops, credit and marketing
facilities, and a system that ensures a fair price for farmers, which
ought to have followed the reform process, did not materialise in an
integrated manner in the farmlands of Kerala. Land reforms as
implemented also had other drawbacks, an important one being the
exemption on land ceiling limits granted to certain types of
plantations.
The reforms, therefore, did not increase agricultural production or
rural employment but resulted in extreme fragmentation of land, which
is an important reason why agriculture has become a low-profit venture
in Kerala. Many new landlords turned to less labour-intensive crops or
other avenues to generate additional income or tended to leave their
lands fallow, resulting in a sharp fall in agricultural employment and
a rise in farm wages disproportionate to the yield. As the trend
towards less labour-intensive crops became the norm, the area under
paddy, the main food crop, fell drastically by over five lakh hectares
(from eight lakh hectares in food-deficit Kerala) in the two decades
from the mid-1980s.
Farmers also increasingly turned towards horticulture and the
cultivation of exotic varieties such as vanilla and medicinal plants,
which were in high demand in the international market – of late, they
are doing this by taking land on lease or through contract farming.
Workers, too, migrated to non-agricultural sectors, especially to
satisfy the demand caused by large-scale construction activity. After
the Gulf boom, land prices became so high that selling agricultural
land for real estate development became the norm. This was encouraged
further by the growing needs of the State’s industrial sector, which
got a boost with changing government perceptions about the drawbacks of
the so-called Kerala “model” of development that eventually found the
State having to deal with a serious economic crisis despite its human
development achievements.
The crisis in Kerala’s agricultural sector, a large part of which is
dominated by cash crops, came to a head with the introduction in the
1990s of the liberalisation policies. The prices of coconut and rubber,
and all other plantation crops in which the State had a substantial
stake, namely, tea, coffee, rubber and cardamom, fell sharply, and the
domestic produce had to compete with low-cost imports. The farm
workers’ agitation of July-August 1997, which led to the destruction of
crops and other income-generating ventures on vast tracts of reclaimed
paddy fields, and the chain suicide of farmers from 2005 onwards in the
primarily agricultural districts of Palakkad, Wayanad and Idukki were
the visible signs of the extreme distress on the State’s agricultural
scene.
Since the 1990s, Kerala has witnessed a growing number of people and
political parties blaming all such ills in agriculture and industry on
what they often describe as the “outdated” provisions of the State’s
land reform law. Important among the recent initiatives to scuttle the
law was the Bill introduced by the previous, Congress-led United
Democratic Front (UDF) government with the objective of removing the
limits on land ownership. A piece of draft legislation prepared by the
UDF government was modelled on the requirements of the agricultural
policy of the then Central government, which advocated the promotion of
contract farming and the reintroduction of leasing of agricultural
land, among other substantive reforms in land policy.
The recent proposal from the Principal Secretary, Industries, argues
for a repeal of the land reforms law itself in order to overcome many
of the problems in agriculture and industry caused by extreme
fragmentation of land, including loss-making cultivation, alienation of
private capital and ineffective management. Such a measure, it further
argues, is also necessary to attract the large-scale industrial
investment that Kerala badly needs for setting up “IT parks, real
estate projects, amusement parks and commercial centres”.
It says that the land reform law has achieved all its objectives in
Kerala, including ushering in peace in the agriculture sector and
curbing naxalism in the State, but has several stipulations that
adversely affect the State’s economic growth and run counter to global
trends. “If Kerala is to attract new industrial ventures, if more jobs
are to be created, if more investments are to come in, we need to
withdraw the law,” it says.
This argument is not much different from those that have come before.
The proposal similarly draws attention for its abject lack of concern
for the complaint of thousands of poor people in the State that there
has been little progress in distributing land equitably despite decades
of reforms or in tackling the combination of new-age landlords, mafia
groups, thriving industrial interests and liberalised government
policies that continue to deny them access to land or rights over
natural resources.
The note, though immediately shot down by Chief Minister V.S.
Achuthanandan and later also disowned by the Industries Department and
political leaders, has achieved its immediate purpose. It has helped
relaunch the debate on the land reform law in Kerala at a time when the
Central government, responding to the demands of thousands of landless
people who marched to New Delhi demanding protection of their rights,
has set up a committee headed by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to
prepare a national land reforms policy.
Significantly, at a press conference convened to announce the
constitution of a State Planning Board working group to study the
implementation of land reforms in Kerala, Achuthanandan said the
proposal by the Principal Secretary was meant “to serve some others but
not the people of the State” and that no one need try “to engineer
changes in such an important law through shortcuts”.
He said in no uncertain terms that Kerala had “not yet fully
implemented the provisions of the land reform law” and that unlike the
scenario presented in the controversial proposal, the issues of concern
were the abnormal rise in the price of land in Kerala, which had pushed
it far beyond the means of the common people; the concentration of land
in the hands of a few individuals; the blooming of a land mafia in the
State; and the exclusion of a large section of the poor from the
prospect of ever owning a piece of land. Real estate businessmen have
started controlling Kerala, the Chief Minister said.
It is perhaps an irony that the forces that have started arguing ever
more vociferously for the scrapping of the land reforms have themselves
drawn their strength from the very same sections in Kerala society that
actually benefited from land reforms. Their critics say, however, that
such forces should not fail to see the harsh reality of Kerala’s land
reform: that nearly one-third of the State’s population still does not
have any land; that the land reform law as it was implemented had
excluded from its purview a major chunk of the land in the State,
including plantations; and that only one-tenth of the surplus land
identified for redistribution has actually been distributed to the
landless so far.
As Achuthanandan indicated at a recent meeting of the National
Development Council, Kerala is witnessing a battle between the “forces
that seek to integrate the State’s productive sectors with global
capitalism” and those who seek the “protection of peasant agriculture
from the baneful consequences of such integration, through deliberate
interventions by the State”.
The working group has been constituted to study in detail the situation
in Kerala since the implementation of land reforms “so that the
government can arrive at a true conclusion about its defects,”
Achuthanandan said.
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