India’s agricultural land value give us a hint about total land value

georgism
land
Author

Vinamr Sachdeva

Published

December 13, 2023

World Bank’s Wealth Accounts provide an estimate for India’s agricultural land value for various categories in 2018 USD:

World Bank’s estimate for total value of cropland and pastureland for 2018 was ~USD 2,070 per capita. This would make it about as large as the GDP in 2018 (current prices USD). So agricultural land value is about 1 times GDP. McKinsey’s estimate of the global average land value is about 2 times GDP. I’d request the reader to read my post on MicKinsey’s estimate (everything before the section on their methodology, at least) before they read this post further.

For the following two reasons, I think India’s land value would be easily closer to, or maybe more than, Australia (~3 times GDP) than the global average:

  1. If we take both World Bank’s Wealth Accounts and McKinsey’s estimate to be true, non-agricultural land value of India would be (2-1 =) 1 times GDP while agricultural land value would be 1 times GDP. Land value is the net present value of expected future land rents. I think it is safe to assume that expected future rents from non-agricultural land would be much higher than agricultural land. Non-agricultural activities contribute more than 83% of India’s GDP and I think it is safe to assume that value-added from agricultural activities as a percentage of GDP would be lower in the future.

  2. In a previous post, I discussed Free A Billion Pvt Ltd’s estimate for India’s surplus land held by the government. And I showed how it is, at the very least, about Rs. 88 lakh crores (1 lakh crore = 1 trillion). This was from 2018, when our GDP was about Rs. 183 lakh crores (assuming an exchange rate of 1 USD = Rs. 68). That is, surplus government land was about .5 times GDP, more than McKinsey’s estimate for total (not only surplus) government land. This further hints that the non-agricultural land value to GDP ratio of India would be higher than the global average.