Land Pooling: Creating Cohesion Out Of
Fragmentation..!
By Mr. Rohan Sharma, JLL India
“Buy land, they’re not
making it anymore” – Mark Twain
Twain’s pithy quote rings a
conflicting note in the India of today. Land remains one of the most prized
physical assets; its non-diminishing economic value increases manifold when it
or even its surroundings are developed.
As cities grow and the need
for capacity building in infrastructure and providing land for economic
activities increases, governments have had to resort to acquiring land owned by
private citizens.
Land acquisition has been a
contentious policy arena, as it largely falls under individual states which
have typically followed the compulsory acquisition route, with compensation
based on the land reference rates determined in each state and municipality by
the local authorities.
These reference rates are
invariably anomalous and largely de-linked from market realities. In certain
cases, the state governments have auctioned such acquired land to private
parties for much higher prices than the meagre compensation paid to the
original landowners.
In short, the economic
benefits arising from land have historically been appropriated by the
government, its agencies or private parties. The interests of the original
title-holders have been marginalised.
Despite different
compensation formulae devised by different states, land acquisition has so far
remained a contentious issue, and has of late spawned numerous people’s
movements, public interest litigations and protests over the denial of the
benefits arising from such land to its first owners.
This murky scenario has
prompted the governments to look at alternate methods of sourcing and
developing land which allow the landowners to partner in and benefit from the
development process. Enter the concept of ‘land pooling’.
What Is Land Pooling?
Land pooling results in
equitable and efficient land development. It is actually a means of readjusting
uneven land distribution by bringing fragmented land holdings together to
constitute a larger land parcel.
Consequently,
infrastructure is developed on the land, and it is then returned to the
original owner/s after applying a formula. This formula compensates the
authority or the entity which undertook the development for the infrastructure
and other provided services by allowing them to sell or retain a part of the
original land.
Though seemingly
complicated, this approach is actually a highly effective way of achieving
development while simultaneously promoting social justice. Land pooling
involves participation of the national and state governments for policy
formulation, notifications, approvals and creation of operational norms.
The local agency will
receive blanket assistance from various government departments, and is
responsible for creating a proper land valuation mechanism to encourage the
participation of land owners.
In this manner, land
pooling creates an ecosystem for planned development through infrastructural
projects supporting urban area growth, and is an efficient means of combining
smaller, irregular land holdings into larger, developed wholes which can serve
as new urban areas.
By turning landowners into
stakeholders in land development through unlocking of their land value and passing
on the majority of the benefits to them, the state creates a model of social
empowerment and growth while ensuring sustainable development.
Multiple Benefits:
· The land
pooling process incentivises the private sector to become a willing participant
in development
· It does
way with bottlenecks of long land acquisition negotiations, and heavy
compensation monies
· The state
also benefits by saving money which it would otherwise have spent on
compensation pay-outs
· More
importantly, the state can avoid legal wrangles related to rehabilitation and
resettlement of dispossessed land-holders, and protests which can arise from
the forcible or compulsory land acquisition method.
· The land
pooling concept helps unlock previously fragmented land holdings and free up
additional land which, in semi-urban and urban fringe areas, can be effectively
utilised for creating affordable, low-cost housing through development norms
which may be prescribed as part of this policy
· It also
allows for creation of newer centres for commercial growth, thus helping to
create employment opportunities.
Finally, the land pooling
method also leads to a robust way to create and maintain land title ownership
records. This, in turn, creates a transparent registry system, which will even
enhance land revenues for the local bodies to undertake more projects for
public benefit.
With apologies to Mr.
Twain, a more constructive approach to solving India’s land acquisition
conundrum would be:
“Don’t buy land, pool it –
the developed whole makes more
sense than the sum of its
fragmented parts.”
About the author..!
Mr. Rohan Sharma is Associate Director (Research
& REIS) at JLL India
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