Top 10% of rural households in India own 44% of the total land area, while about 46% of households are landless.
Bihar and Punjab have the highest share of villages where a single landlord owns more than half of the available land.
The study is based on the Socio-Economic Caste Census 2011, covering 650 million individuals from 270,000 villages across ten major states.
Kerala has the highest Gini coefficient at 90, indicating high land inequality, followed by Bihar, Punjab, Tamil Nadu, and West Bengal.
Detailed Insights:
Land ownership is highly concentrated in rural India, with large landholders dominating land control in many villages.
Bihar and Kerala exhibit high levels of land concentration in terms of top 10%, 5%, or 1% ownership.
Among states with high agricultural dependency, Rajasthan (34%) and Uttar Pradesh (39%) have lower landlessness compared to Madhya Pradesh (51%) and Bihar (59%).
Punjab, known for commercial agriculture, has the highest landlessness at 73%.
Excluding the landless population reduces the Gini coefficient for all states, indicating that landlessness significantly contributes to overall inequality.
Among landed households, the average landholding size is 6.2 hectares, with 28.9% of land held by households with 0-1 hectares, and 48.6% by households with 1-2 hectares.
The mean share of land held by the largest landholder in a village is 12.4%, and in 3.8% of villages, the largest landholder owns over 50% of the land.
Key Concepts Involved:
Gini Coefficient: A measure of statistical dispersion representing income or wealth distribution within a population.
Landlessness: The condition of individuals or households not owning agricultural land.
Land Concentration: The extent to which land ownership is concentrated among a small percentage of the population.