Elections are approaching and political parties are preparing their manifestoes. All are unanimous that people got a raw deal under both dictatorship and democracy. Some leaders argue that corruption is the central issue which if solved would automatically improve the lot of the poor. This may be true but only partly. Some argues that more democracy and unthrottled democracy would, in the long run, eliminate poverty, as happened in the West.
While this may be true, democratic societies are also doing some soul searching whether democracy has performed efficiently towards maximising people's welfare. There are strong anti-capitalist under currents bringing forth movements like Occupy the Stock-Exchanges. Democracy and a corruption-free administration would certainly improve the lot of the poor in the long run. More than one-third of Pakistan's populace is abject poor and the rest are only slightly better except for a tiny minority. The task of ameliorating if not eliminating poverty is too big. The trickle-down effect may take too long, a time span that would endanger the integrity and solidarity of this country.
What to do. There is world-wide recession. Economy has performed awfully for both domestic and international reasons. There is a misplaced even a dangerous perception that things work out themselves and that no major initiatives are necessary, as has been the case with most military dictatorships. The entire cushion, unfortunately, has been eaten up. In our region, our adversary has been progressing faster than ever before. Economic disparity between India and Pakistan cannot be sustained for a long time and would lead to the same kind of fissure that led to the dissolution of the Soviet system; disparity and failure in economic and social performance .We will have to apply some direct tools and policy initiatives to improve the lot of the poor. But the government does not have money; it does have resources and the only transferable resource is land. We will see in this space as to what can be done in this respect.
There is a general thinking that the days of land redistribution or reforms are over. It is outmoded or out of tune with times. Land redistribution leads to fragmentation which results in lower agricultural productivity. And that land redistribution may result in loss of agricultural production because the poor would not have the working capital to buy the inputs. Many religious scholars have also opposed land redistribution arguing that Islam respects private property. It is also true that most of these arguments have roots in the opposition to communist ideology in the days of Cold war. There are equally convincing arguments to the contrary; the land belongs to Allah; private property rights only pertain to the cultivated land; land gifted by infidel colonialists to their supporters has no moral or religious sanction or support; hunger and poverty are enemies of Islam and Allah; feeding the hungry is the state's responsibility in Islam; smaller tracts in Pakistan are more productive than large tracts; mechanisation is easy, cheap and readily available even to the small farmer in the form of rentals; large tracts of lands leads to feudalism which militates against liberty, freedom and development and conspires with the forces of the statusquo and militarism as has been demonstrated by the history of Japan and even here in Pakistan. And the biggest falsehood is that all land has been distributed under previous land reforms and there is nothing more left; all farms ownerships are less than 500 acres. It has been acknowledged that there are hundreds if not thousands of landlords who own tens of thousands of acres of land, violating the existing relevant laws.
The biggest argument against land reform is; who will bell the cat? The situation on the ground is that the landlords are not prepared to even pay income tax on their huge incomes; and the majority of civil and military elite is the feudal. Military middle classes are transformed into landed elites through awards and rewards and many other routes. It is argued that one has to either wait for a near catastrophe of the dimensions of 16th December 1971 and the emergence of a Marde-Khuda. A Marde Khuda came in 1971, but he conspired with the feudal and launched an anti-industrialist agenda and even strengthened feudalism. And then several Mard or Namarde Khuda came in the form of military dictators who probably had the power and wherewithal to take some drastic land reforms programme, but acted on the contrary finding ready friends among the landlords. However, short of catastrophe and civil war, and without the Marde-Khuda, there are some solutions that we are going to take up in the following. Among the political parties, the MQM does have anti-feudal agenda, but lacks land reform commitment and suffers from narrow geographical support. It is possible that in future a political coalition may emerge that may be ready to act on some kind of land reforms programme and taxing the large agricultural incomes.
Agriculture and poverty
Agriculture has a share of 26 percent in Pakistan's GDP and employs 60 percent of the workforce. The sector has a potential of growing at rate of 5% p.a., as it did in the 1960s earlier. Low growth rates in the economy in general and in agriculture has significantly contributed to poverty and unemployment. Poverty in Pakistan, as measured in 2007-08, was at 26%, which should have increased in the wake of floods and the economic crisis, and has reportedly returned to the previous high levels of 33-38 % of 2001-2002. Rural poverty has always been high in Pakistan at 40% plus. A major reason for it has been landlessness and low employment. A good 10.36 % of the rural households are landless peasants and another 57% (35.1 % of the total population) are under-employed and under-paid non-farm labourers. Both of these groups could benefit from higher agricultural growth rates, land reforms and land redistribution.
Higher growth rates would create employment in the farm and non-farm sector and would increase wages and incomes. Both growth and equity policies can be mutually reinforcing. Our argument is that the livestock sector in Pakistan has a contribution of 47 % in agricultural output, which has been mostly contributed by small holders or the landless, having 2-5 Buffaloes. If 1-1.5 Acre plots are distributed to this group of the landless and the non-farm workers, under a land reforms scheme, it would contribute to both, output and equity. Similarly, the proposed beneficiary group could also participate in the high value horticultural sector, which has been shown to have a growth potential of 5.0% p.a. A reasonable land reform component along with the distribution of state land to the rural and possibly urban poor could go a long way in reducing the endemic poverty in this country. Many recent writings have indicated the destabilising potential of the rural and urban poverty and disparities. Even the Taliban issue is interpreted as having a linkage to poverty and deprivation. This creates a new logic and rationale for land reforms which may not only be restricted to land distribution but should go well beyond towards improving upon the tenure issues. The author would strongly argue against the so-called market efficiency and growth-sans-equity policies for example as in Egypt which have worsened the poverty and inequity conditions.
Land ownership and utilisation in Pakistan
1) Number of households / population increased by 25% during the two censuses (1990-2000).
2) Number of farms increased from 5.071 million to 6.6 million: 1.549 million farms added: an increase of 30.54%; total Farm area increased by only 6.15 %; 0.6% increase p.a.
3) Number of farms under 1 hectare (ha) remained almost the same; however, farm area under this category increased by 68.47 %, an addition of 483,000 ha. Percentage of these farms in the total number of farms increased from 27 % to 36%.
4) Number of largest farms, 60 ha and more, decreased from 15000 to 14000, a decrease of 1000 farms; area under these farms also decreased from 1.936 million ha to 1.683 million ha a decrease of 15% in area.
5) In 1990, 27% farms had 4% of total farm area, while the largest farms (60 ha and more and, less than 0.5 % of the total number of farms) had 10% of the total farm area .In 2000, 36% farms (under 1 ha) had 6% of the total farm area, while large farms had 8% of the total farm area. Has the skewed distribution decreased? In 1990, the large farms' total area was 2.75 times higher than the total area of small farms( under 1 ha) area, the same ratio decreased to 1.42 times only ; skewed distribution and disparity still quite high ,but appears to have been reduced by almost 100%, under this indicator.
6) In Pakistan about, 6.6 Million farming families own 6.6 million farms, over a farm area of 50 million Acres (average size 8 Acres), of which 20% farm area remains uncultivated. 58% Farms or farm house- holds have only 10% of the total farm area, call them very small farmers( under 5 acres); 37% small farmers (5-25 acres) own 47% of the farm area; 5% larger farmers (25-100 acres) own 26% and 0.5% (30,000 families) of super land lords (100 acres plus) own 11% of the total farm areas.
7) Some 19% of the total farm area remains uncultivated. In small farms up to 93% of farm land remains cultivated. This percentage goes down with the increase in farm size. At 100 acres plus, roughly one-half (50%) of the land area remains uncultivated and unutilised.
8) About 2.6 million acres of farm area in large farm size category remains unutilised, which is under the control of 30,000 super land lord families. Another 1.5 million acres remain uncultivated in 50-100 Acres plot size. Potentially about 2.6-4 million acres (50%) of unutilised farm lands is "distributable". Two million landless could benefit.
Our land reforms experience; a review
Although the Muslim League Leadership was 'mostly feudal the latter felt and recognised the popular pressure for land and tenancy reform. Hari Report, Daultana Commission, MLR-54 and MLR-115 have been the major milestones in the land and tenancy reform history in Pakistan. The last move in this respect dates back to 1977, when PM Bhutto announced a new package of reforms including lower ceilings on land and allotment of government land to the poor tenants. The freedom movement and the ideological conflict between the East and the West created and sustained pressures for land reforms in the developing world. Ideological period having gone, the futility of the earlier reforms and the entrenchment of feudal interest in Pakistan's body politic are possibly the reasons, why any such move does not get even mentioned these days. There is substantial post-war evidence that societies, which have implemented meaningful land reforms, and put an end to feudalism, transformed themselves with a new dynamism required for scientific and industrial growth and development. Taiwan, Korea and Japan are classic examples. Taiwan and Korea utilised the opportunity created by the exit of Japanese landlords to launch deep and effective land reforms. Pakistan lost this opportunity which was available to it after independence, as many non-Muslim landowners fled the country.
The economic rationale for earlier land reforms was based more on optimal considerations and hitherto under-utilisation of the lands available with the big landlord. It appears that the redistribution impact was much less of a consideration in the view of the planners and decision-makers. The political objectives included acquisition of political legitimacy, and shaking and controlling the feudal class through carrot and stick approach and enhancing the political clientele and image among the masses. Ayub Khan's reforms (MLR 64) put the upper ceiling of irrigated land at 500 acres per family and un-irrigated at 1000 acres per family. Compensation to be paid through an inheritable bond which earned 4% p.a. interest and land was to be redistributed at a price. Bhutto's reforms (MLR 115) put the upper ceiling at 150 acres irrigated and 300 acres un-irrigated per member of a family. No compensation was to be paid to owners and the land was to be distributed free. Put together, the two land reforms affected about 4% of the land, only half of which was actually transferred to the landless. Only about 100,000 farming households 8% of the total (and even much less if landlessness was included) benefited.
A new land reform package
In Pakistan, 28% of the total landmass is under cultivation, and huge chunks of land remain unutilised. About 6.6 million households own 6.6 million farms over a total farm area of 50 million acres. Only some 80% of this farm area is actually cultivated. The remaining 20% of the farm area remains uncultivated. Small farms utilise up to 95% of the available farm land, while large farms owned by big and powerful landlords remain uncultivated to the extent of almost 50%.A total of 2.66 million acres of farm area remains uncultivated in the large farm category(100 acres plus). Some 30,000 landlord families could benefit one million plus landless families, if uncultivated land is given away to the latter under some Land Distribution Scheme, if not land reforms exactly. In Land Reforms, usually land is forcibly taken away under legislation or revolution without any compensation.
There is also a case for bringing more land under agriculture. Perhaps ten million more acres could be added by new land expansion and development activity probably in the next ten years. This would mean one million acres per year of new land to be transferred to the landless. One would argue, where would the water come from? We are already short of water. We are currently wasting water under the existing flood irrigation practices. The new land under the landless families would be from the very beginning on the more efficient Drip Irrigation (D.I.), which may be cheap as well as efficient. The landless poor beneficiary would be more inclined and capable of introducing bucket and pipe drip irrigation. He would not have much choice. He does not have many choices in life either.
Thus about 14 million acres of land (10 million new and 4 million existing unutilised) could be distributed among the landless over a period of some ten years, benefiting 5-6 million families, with a farm of 2.5 acres each, practically solving the issue of landlessness, if not of poverty totally. Even after getting 2.5 acres, he would not be totally out of the clutches of grinding poverty. But he would get hope and the tools, to handle the economic problems of his family.
Pakistan would need more land under cultivation to feed its ever-increasing population, as productivity increases are too far and few in between. The diseconomy of scale, if any, of the small farms should be taken care of by an organised co-operative movement that could take care of the credit and inputs. Land is the only thing that governments can afford to give free, it may charge some development cost in the long run under a concessionary credit scheme. Land remains on earth. It does not evaporate and does not disappear. It is excellent collateral for the poor. After all if a country belongs to its people, they should all own some piece of land, however, small it may be.
Land has been distributed in Pakistan among the rich and powerful and literally given away at dirt prices. Some effort would have to be made to include the poor in this largesse. There is mass appeal and appetite for land confiscation by the state without compensation. Hence the two attempts at land reforms, were unsuccessful. Any new land distribution scheme should be careful and respect the federalism requirements and local and regional rights. It should not import people from the outside, unless in special cases, where demand and supply gaps may exist.
On the other hand the big landlords may be induced by the State to do away with their excess unutilised land by imposing a variety of taxes including the much dreaded and opposed Income Tax .Excess land can be acquired by the provincial governments under a land bond scheme carrying a reasonable interest rate. The poor land allotee may also be required to pay off a part of the land price under a concessionary credit scheme. Similar schemes have been implemented in Japan, Korea and Germany immediately after the Second World War of 1945.
Landless peasants can be given a 1-2 Acre farm each, at 50% of the purchase cost under 4% p.a. and 20 yrs repayment. Alternatively GOP and provincial governments could develop 2-4 million acres over a period of 7-10 yrs, possibly under the budgetary outlay than the procurement of private land. The Government of Sindh is already implementing such a programme at a modest scale by converting kutcha forest-land but without forest, to agricultural land and distributing it among landless. This can be done with much ease in Balochistan, where large tracts of land remain unutilised. For political and possibly good reasons, land in Balochistan can only go to the Balochs and hence only 1.0 million families could benefit. Almost all the households in Balochistan could get a reasonably sized farm. In Punjab, the problem is difficult due to large population and in NWFP the land is limited, although in both the cases, there are less populated areas the tribal belt in NWFP and southern Punjab. Instead of giving land to reward generals and bureaucrats and large real state investors, the scarce land should go to the landless poor.
Land is the only thing governments, mostly provincial, have. Budgetary resources are limited and cannot almost always be enough, be it BISP or the Zakat fund.
The cultivable waste land
There was a total of 8.22 million ha of cultivable waste land available to be cultivated, perhaps all of it government land, almost half of it (3.97 Million ha) is in Balochistan. There are only 1.163 million households in Balochistan. If this land is distributed, every household in Balochistan gets 3.41 ha (8.5 acres), much more land than most of the households in Punjab. One doesn't have to take it away from some one; The Government and the province of Balochistan have it with themselves. Likewise, KP has 1.21 million ha of cultivable waste land, and only 2.77 million house-holds. KP has a land area problem, and about 0.5 ha (1.25 acres) could be distributed to every family in KP. Some 1.29 million farms in the country are under 0.5 ha. It is better than being totally landless. Some of the allotted lands would be sold, because every one cannot enter into agriculture. Ultimately, if 50% of the households end up selling the allotted land, the average farm size increases to 1 ha, which should be quite sufficient to produce food for a family or produce products of an equivalent value.
Alternatively, GoKP could allot the available wasteland to 50% of the families, to get the same result. In Sindh and Punjab, the landless are high in number and the available cultivable wasteland much less. Nevertheless, 1.6 million ha of this land available in Punjab could be distributed among 3 million households. Similarly, in Sindh, 1.44 million ha could go to another 2 million households. A total of 6 million households, out of a total of 14 million rural households can thus get land, without resorting to redistribution. There is a big if in it. The land may have been already grabbed by the powerful. It has come to public light only after the floods that in Sindh; most of the sailabi land had been grabbed by the powerful landlords, and had been put to share-cropping.
Times have changed. Today's reports of the World Bank and IMF and other western agencies read like a communist manifesto. The kind of poverty and hunger eradication literature that is coming out now for more than two decades would have sent the writers and publishers of those writings to jail in the 1950s, 60s and even the 70s.Today the biggest enemy or adversary of the World powers is religious fundamentalism and extremism replacing the erstwhile Communism. Let me quote here from a report compiled under the aegis of USAID. Ironically, USAID and the World Bank have supported land reforms in the past in many strife prone regions. Taliban issue seems to have created a new rationale for land reforms among the donor agencies. It is being argued that the Taliban may exploit the issue and would most probably be successful in drawing support from the landless poor farmers and enhance their appeal and domain. There is significant evidence that most of the Taliban and their supporters come from the landless class.
There are other options and components of the reform programme as well that extend to water rights and urban housing schemes. Under new irrigation schemes, whenever these come up, tradeable water rights could be awarded to the landless, which he could sell to the willing customer or use it as his collateral or share in the distribution of agricultural output and profits. In this way he becomes a partner in place of serf.
In urban land laws, provisions for high-rise building societies could be introduced, where virtual plots in the third dimensions are allotable. Real state developers could be encouraged to develop multi-purpose projects, where in lieu of subsidised land or free land use conversion, a certain percentage of 3-D plots are allotted to the poor. Currently a lot of money changes hands on conversion of agricultural or residential land to the commercial one. Some fees does go to the local or provincial government but most of the surplus is siphoned away by the builders, landowners and the social and political elite. So the name of the game is to create policy or innovation surplus and divert it to the poor.
There is a lot of government land that is available on the periphery of Karachi near Sohrab Goth (outside Karachi limits) and in district Thatta that could be allotted to the flood victims especially from the inundated towns of Jacobabad, Larkana and Thatta. If Sindh has to develop regional economies have to be established, as happened around Lahore. Karachi itself would benefit from regional economic development as Lahore has. Karachi's' economy has been stagnating for many years now. One of the reasons is lack of close geographical interaction and resource reservoirs. Everybody would benefit. However the idea would fail if it is used for political and ethnic manipulation and advantage.
I would like to add a caveat here. The last PML (N) government headed by Nawaz Sharif introduced an innovative housing policy and strategy for the urban areas by transferring surplus government land and plots for low-cost public housing projects. A good innovative project was, however, reportedly marred by construction scams. There was no need of involving the government in construction by a party which believes so much in the private sector. That project perhaps is revived in one form or the other. Some residual land or assets may still be there. Musharraf government quietly put a lid on it. No NAB case has been filed with respect to this project apparently. May be, there is one or a few. I am not sure.
These are excerpts from the writers forthcoming book; Pakistan's development: economy, resources and technology
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