The top 10 % rural households of India own 44 % of land, while 46 % of rural households are landless, according to a working paper released by World Inequality Lab.
The paper, titled 'Land Inequality in India: Nature, History, and Markets', further said that the top 5 % households own 32 % of land, while 18 % of rural land ownership is held by the top 1 %.
The paper is jointly authored by Nitin Kumar Bharti, David Blakeslee and Samreen Malik, drawing on one of the largest datasets ever assembled on land ownership in India, covering around 650 million people across 2,70,000 villages.
"The average village land Gini (an index measuring landholding inequality on a scale of 0-100) reaches 71 when landless households are included, and 46 % of rural households are landless," the paper said, adding that on average, the largest landholder controls about 12 % of village land, and in some villages a single owner controls more than half of all agricultural land.
The World Inequality Lab (WIL) is a research laboratory based primarily at the Paris School of Economics (PSE).
According to the paper, the diversity of land inequality levels across Indian states is almost as large as that between countries at the world level.
The paper noted that agricultural productivity is strongly associated with higher land inequality.
"Villages with more favourable agro-ecological conditions tend to exhibit greater land concentration, increasing the share of land controlled by large landowners," it said.
While pointing out that historical institutions leave persistent effects on land distribution, the paper said the villages falling under the direct-rule of British colonialism tend to have higher land inequality compared to those which were under Indian rulers.
The paper highlighted that social stratification also shapes land ownership.
"Villages with higher shares of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes tend to exhibit higher rates of landlessness, reflecting the enduring role of social hierarchies in structuring access to productive assets," it said, adding that the notable exception is in Kerala and West Bengal, which have long been governed by left-wing parties.
The paper opined that market access does not fully eliminate historically rooted inequalities.
"Proximity to towns, roads, and markets appears insufficient to overturn deeply embedded patterns of land inequality shaped by natural conditions and institutional history," the paper said.
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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