Jeetendra P. Aryal and Stein T. Holden Department of Economics and Resource Management Norwegian University of Life Sciences (UMB) P. O. Box 5003, N-1432.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
2010 RR Donnelley SEC Hot Topics 2010 Proxy Season Year in Review September 14, 2010 Presenter: Thomas A. Germinario Senior Vice President D. F. King &
Advertisements

Property Tax Relief and Reform: Plan Overview Joint Select Committee on Property Tax Relief and Reform June 11, 2007.
Consolidated Financial Statements: Intercompany Transactions
Economic Growth Economic growth is the fundamental determinant of the long-run success of any nation, the basis source of rising living standards, and.
The Hungarian Budget Review Daniel Bergvall and Ian Hawkesworth Budgeting and Public Expenditures Division.
1. 2 Why are Result & Impact Indicators Needed? To better understand the positive/negative results of EC aid. The main questions are: 1.What change is.
0 - 0.
ECON2013 Development Economics The informal sector © Peter Smith, March This work is licensed under a Creative Commons licenceCreative Commons.
The Housing Crisis: There is an Alternative Birkbeck College Duncan Bowie University of Westminster 18 th November 2011.
Buy to let and the reconfiguration of Londons housing market Steve Wilcox University of York.
Selling Foreign products and services into saudi arabia
Economic Efficiency, Government Price Setting, and Taxes
1 Rental Housing in Poland – private and public finance W. Jan Brzeski.
Supply, Demand, and Government Policies
C h a p t e r f o u r © 2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics R. Glenn Hubbard, Anthony Patrick OBrien1 st ed. Prepared by: Fernando & Yvonn.
Chapter 2 Supply and Demand.
The Price System The market system, also called the price system, performs two important and closely related functions: Price Rationing Resource Allocation.
Performance and Strategy in Competitive Markets Chapter 8.
Chapter 5 Markets in Action.
Introduction: Thinking Like an Economist 1 CHAPTER Using Supply and Demand It is by invisible hands that we are bent and tortured worst. Nietzsche CHAPTER.
2.6.2 Urban Land Reform in China 1 UPA Package 2, Module 6 LAND REFORM.
© 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics R. Glenn Hubbard, Anthony Patrick OBrien, 2e. Fernando & Yvonn Quijano Prepared by: Chapter 4 Economic.
CHAPTER 1: UNDERSTANDING THE FINANCIAL PLANNING PROCESS.
‘Land Rights are Human Rights’: The case for a Specific Right to Land? Jeremie Gilbert, University of East London.
Securing a Living space G1 © Family Economics & Financial Education – November 2005 – Housing Unit – Securing a Living Space – Slide 2 Funded by.
2.2.2 Formalizing Property Right and Tenure Security 1 FORMALIZING PROPETY RIGHTS AND TENURE SECURITY UPA Package 2, Module 2.
© 2007 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Principles of Economics 8e by Case and Fair Prepared by: Fernando & Yvonn Quijano 12 Chapter General Equilibrium.
Ponsonby Property Management Ltd Monica Chen Optimising Property Investment Performance.
The Balance Sheet Statement
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 11 Development Policymaking and the Roles of Market, State, and Civil Society.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved CHAPTER16CHAPTER16 CHAPTER16CHAPTER16 Financing Project Development.
Chapter 13 THE INCOME APPROACH.
LAND REFORMS LAND REFORMS.
Lessons and Insights on Access to Land: The Philippine Experience Presented by ANGOC At the ILC-AoM 23 April 2009 Yak & Yeti Hotel, Kathmandu, Nepal.
Department of Economics Bapatla College of Arts & Science Land reforms in India.
Land Rights: A Step Forward to Empowering Women Mukesh Kumar Khatwani, Programme Advisor, Indus Future Foundation
Agricultural Transformation and Rural Development
Elements of Pakistani Land Law
1 Regional Training Institute, Ranchi Structured Training Courseware on State Receipt Audit Audit of Land Revenue.
Equity and efficiency impacts of rural land rental restrictions : Evidence from India Land Policies & Legal Empowerment of the Poor Nov 3, 2006 H.K. Nagarajan,
Land Administration in Africa Searching for Land Tenure Security May 22 to 25, 2006 Alternatives to Titling Geoffrey K. Payne Principal Geofftrey Payne.
Land Rental Markets in the Process of Structural Transformation: Productivity and Equity Impacts in China Songqing Jin and Klaus Deininger World Bank.
Towards a fair and sustainable private rented sector Seb Klier, Policy & Campaigns Manager, Generation Rent Brighton Advice Services Network meeting, May.
Land Reform Experience, from the Experience of Swedesurvey Cooperation with Transition Countries Tommy Österberg Technical Director Swedesurvey.
 Estates are interests in land  An estate provides a possessor with all the rights associated with tenures (mainly the right to occupy) as well as an.
ROSEMARY WACHIRA MINISTRY OF LANDS, KENYA NARTIONAL LAND POLICY FOR POVERTY REDUCTION AND ECONOMIC GROWTH December 2006.
Udviklingsøkonomi - grundfag Lecture 10 Markets in agriculture. A brief survey of rural microeconomics Ray chapter 11 Binswanger and Rosenzweig, JDS 1986.
Land and Labor Dr. George Norton Agricultural and Applied Economics Virginia Tech Copyright 2009 AAEC 3204.
T4.1 H&N, Ch. 4 Chapter Outline 4.1CONTRACTING COSTS OF RISK POOLING ARRANGEMENTS Types of Contracting Costs Ex Ante Premium Payments vs. Ex Post Assessments.
Policies Aimed at Raising the Income of the Poor Text extracted from: The World Food Problem Leathers & Foster, 2004
Land Administration Åse Christensen Polytechnic of Namibia, Namibia Land Administration Course Land Administration, Bachelor Semester 5, February 2015.
Economic Impacts of LTPR Programming Property Rights and Resource Governance Issues and Best Practices Benjamin Linkow October 2011.
COMMISSION 1 Land redistribution: Urban & Rural Development.
Land Reform Monitoring. What can we accomplish? Provide feedback on the status, impacts on local communities and take actions accordingly Educate and.
1 AGRARIAN STRUCTURE: The Role of Land Policies Gershon Feder The World Bank.
Kenya Land Redistribution Experience: The million acre settlement scheme Karuti Kanyinga Institute for Development Studies University of Nairobi.
A Land Tenure Module (LTM) for LSMS By Stein Holden, Daniel Ali, Klaus Deininger and Thea Hilhorst The 2016 World Bank Land and Poverty Conference: Scaling.
Land Reform in Nepal Issues, challenges, and links with conflict and sustainable peace International workshop on land restitution, 30 June – 4 July 2015.
Direct Payments in the CAP post 2013 EP Workshop "CAP towards 2020", Brussels, 7 February 2011 Stefan Tangermann Department of Agricultural Economics and.
(Land & Labour Specialists)
ANNUAL PERFORMANCE PLAN
Songqing Jin – Michigan State University Klaus Deininger – World Bank
Klaus Deininger, Songqing Jin, Vandana Yadav
Abolition of zamindary system
Agriculture & Food Commission – Water Group – Jean-Philippe Fontenelle
China’s Rural Land Registration and Certification Piloting Project
Land markets and regulations in Europe Presentation prepared for the Meeting regarding the exchange of views on the access and use of farmland 7 February.
Topic – Cultivation Tenure System
Introduction Welcome national and parliamentary debate;
Presentation transcript:

Jeetendra P. Aryal and Stein T. Holden Department of Economics and Resource Management Norwegian University of Life Sciences (UMB) P. O. Box 5003, N-1432 Ås, Norway Land Reforms in Nepal

NORWEGIAN UNIVERSITY OF LIFE SCIENCES Introduction: Land Reform Act of 1964 First, comprehensive land reform programme in Nepal The Land Reform Act of 1964 has been amended a number of times. Objectives of Land Reform 1964: –Ensure a fair share of the production to the cultivators by putting an end to exploitation –Encourage labor and capital to shift from agriculture to other sectors Land Reforms in Nepal 2

NORWEGIAN UNIVERSITY OF LIFE SCIENCES Main Features of Land Reform 1964 Abolition of intermediaries collecting taxes (calledZamindari System in Nepal) Imposition of ceilings on land ownership: – 17 ha in the Terai –4.1 ha in the hills and –2.67 ha in Kathmandu valley Imposition of ceiling of tenancy holdings –2.67 ha in the Terai –1.51 ha in the hills and –1.02 ha in Kathmandu valley Land Reforms in Nepal 3

NORWEGIAN UNIVERSITY OF LIFE SCIENCES Main Features of Land Reform 1964 (contd.) Redistribution of the surplus land (land acquired after the imposition of the ceilings) to land-poor/landless farmers Security of tenancy rights –Cannot evict tenant without proper reasons –Later on, interpreted as: registered tenants can claim ownership rights on 25% of rented land (land-to-the- tiller) Fixing of rent no more than 50% of production Abolition of sub-tenancies A compulsory saving program to provide an alternative source of credit Land Reforms in Nepal 4

NORWEGIAN UNIVERSITY OF LIFE SCIENCES Implementation of Land Reform 1964 Longer time to implement programme –Cadastral survey –Identification of tenants –Distribution of provisional certificates of tenancy Land ceilings imposed in 3 phases –1st phase: 16 districts in 1964 –2nd phase: 25 districts in 1965 –3rd phase: 34 districts in 1966 Land Reforms in Nepal 5

NORWEGIAN UNIVERSITY OF LIFE SCIENCES Achievements of Land Reform 1964 Successful in abolishing intermediaries collecting taxes Granted tenancy certificates to 300,000 tillers Acquire nearly ha surplus land (land obtained by imposing ceiling on land holding)- nearly 2% of total agricultural land. Land Reforms in Nepal 6

NORWEGIAN UNIVERSITY OF LIFE SCIENCES Weaknesses of Land Reform 1964 Due to weak implementation, –large land owners got time to sell (or redistribute among close relatives) their land above ceiling –Many landlords evicted tenants Dual ownership of rented land: As tenants can claim ownership rights to 25% of the rented land, it created dual ownership of rented land by landlord and tenant. –Increased conflicts between landlords and formal tenants –Increased informal short-term tenancy as landlords fear to rent out land using written contract Land Reforms in Nepal 7

NORWEGIAN UNIVERSITY OF LIFE SCIENCES Land Reforms in Nepal 8

NORWEGIAN UNIVERSITY OF LIFE SCIENCES Consequences of Land Reform 1964 Weaker property rights of landlord on rented out land More focus on benefit of tenants through expropriation of land in tenancy and access in ownership rather than on rental regulations to facilitate land rental markets and enhance productivity. Tenants may not return rented lands even after the expiration of contracts but claim the ownership rights to the land. Increased conflicts between landlords and tenants Land Reforms in Nepal 9

NORWEGIAN UNIVERSITY OF LIFE SCIENCES Consequences of Land Reform 1964 Distorted land rental markets Create a loss-loss situation for tenants (Bhandari, 2006) –Do not get enough land from redistribution (because only 2 % land was acquired by imposing ceiling and that was distributed among land-poor tenants) –Reduced access to land through land rental market due to insecurity for landlords. Land Reforms in Nepal 10

NORWEGIAN UNIVERSITY OF LIFE SCIENCES Amendment to the Land Act of 1964 in 1996 Main objectives: Abolish traditional tenancy by partitioning tenanted land. Abolish dual ownership of rented land Main features: Equally divide land under tenancy between landlord and tenant (Provision that tenant can claim ownership rights to 50% of tenanted land). Receive 50% ownership rights if the tenant tills the land for 3 consecutive years. Land Reforms in Nepal 11

NORWEGIAN UNIVERSITY OF LIFE SCIENCES Amendment to the Land Act of 1964 in 1996 Lower ceiling of ownership holding of land –3 ha in the Terai –2 ha in the Hills –4 ha in the Mountains –1 ha in the Kathmandu valley and all other urban areas –0.5 ha in urban areas of Kathmandu valley Compensation to land owners whose land is above the new ceilings Land Reforms in Nepal 12

NORWEGIAN UNIVERSITY OF LIFE SCIENCES Weaknesses Not implemented yet Aggravated the problem by increasing the share of the rented land that the tenants can claim. Increasing tenure insecurity for landlords Distorted land rental markets Land Reforms in Nepal 13

NORWEGIAN UNIVERSITY OF LIFE SCIENCES Land Reform in Nepal: the Present Context After the Maoist war: Land reform a scientific land reform a top agenda for all political parties in Nepal Not clear on what constitutes a scientific land reform Maoist favors land-to-the-tiller policy again by capturing land from landlords without any compensation; other parties oppose it. Land Reforms in Nepal 14