Don’t miss the latest developments in business and finance.

Modi govt targets land disputes that cripple India's infrastructure

The spat over a location to house train carriages has indefinitely delayed the construction of a metro that could decongest the city and bring $4.2 billion worth of investments

Modi govt targets land disputes that cripple India’s infrastructure
NITI Aayog has crafted a new model Bill in which states will guarantee the accuracy of land titles and provide compensation in case of disputes, replacing colonial-era laws
Archana Chaudhary & Bibhudatta Pradhan | Bloomberg
4 min read Last Updated : Feb 05 2021 | 12:07 AM IST
Twice a day at rush hour, more than 3 million cars clog Mumbai’s streets and nearly 4 million commuters squeeze onto overcrowded trains, while a four-decade land dispute that has prevented India’s financial capital from building a modern metro system continues to simmer.
 
The spat over a location to house train carriages has indefinitely delayed the construction of a metro that could decongest the city and bring $4.2 billion worth of investments. And that’s not the only Indian mega-project shelved or scrapped because of land troubles: Other casualties include a $17 billion bullet train, a $12 billion steel project and over 700 road projects.
 
Now Prime Minister Narendra Modi is seeking to clear a backlog of land cases and unleash investment to boost local manufacturing and generate millions of jobs to lift an economy set for its biggest annual contraction since 1952. The move could also potentially help the government’s efforts to convince firms to uproot supply chains from China and set up shop in India. The country’s planning body — the NITI Aayog — has crafted a new model Bill in which states will guarantee the accuracy of land titles and provide compensation in case of disputes. It would replace colonial-era laws and require states to computerise all land records, link the details of landowners to those digital records and establish tribunals to resolve all outstanding cases within three years.
 
“Life will become easy if this system is put in place,” said Vinod Agrawal, head of the government committee that drafted the proposed law. He added that similar land titling systems are in place in more than 80 countries, from Australia and the UK to South Korea and Thailand.
 
State powers
 
While the BJP controls Parliament and could easily pass the federal law, its success ultimately hinges on regional leaders who need to adopt laws based the model bill in their states. The farmer protests that erupted after the Centre passed laws to overhaul decades-old rules for selling crops also show that it’s not a given everything will go smoothly.
 
Thousands of farmers have protested at New Delhi’s borders for about two months to demand a repeal of the new laws passed in September, saying the legislation will make them vulnerable to large corporations. Opposition from farmers also prompted Modi to backtrack on a move in 2015 that made it easier for companies to acquire land.
 
Still farmers could have more certainty with clear land titles, which would also encourage more investment in the infrastructure and realty sectors, according to Deepak Sood, secretary-general of the Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India, one of the country’s largest business groups. Agriculture holdings comprise nearly half of India’s total land area and employ more than 60 per cent of Indians, with data showing the average farm size at around 1 hectare (2.5 acres) — about the size of two football fields. Clearer land titles would also help India attract more manufacturing as it works with Japan and Australia to build more resilient supply chains as tensions grow with China. The government recently announced incentives for companies looking to move to India, part of a broader plan to increase the share of manufacturing in the economy to 25 per cent from 15 per cent.
 
‘India means business’
 
“The initial message will be that India means business and is making the changes that are needed for investors to set up shop,” said Amitendu Palit, an economist specialising in international trade and investment at the National University of Singapore. “But this may still be a difficult exercise, given that land is an emotive issue and the implementation has to be done by states.”
 
While the Digital India Land Records Modernisation Program dashboard shows that land records in 90.1 per cent of villages have been computerised, many records haven’t been properly updated — forcing investors to deal with multiple parties to acquire land and often face requests for bribery. The new law would require states to link that record with the landholder’s digital identity and may allow investors to deal with the owner directly, cutting out middle men and lower level bureaucrats and reducing delays and corruption.


Topics :infrastructureInvestmentsModi govt

Next Story