Thanks for sharing.
While it is a good news for medium to large farmers, how dose this help 300 million landless peasants/population in India, especially those farm laborers?
China has a very different situation. In theory, there is no so called "landless farmers" in China, thanks to Mao's "land reform" which confiscated farm lands from Landlord Class, and Deng's de facto "land privatization" in the 70's, which redistributed collectively owned farm land to each and every farmers based on the number of people in the family. The land ownership can't not be transferred, but it can be leased out.
The mechanization of agriculture means the liberation of farm hands, and surplus farmers either became employees in the village/township owned factories or business (most of them have already been privatized), or became part of the 100 million strong migrant workers who fueled the China's economic growth from 80's to present time.
When the bad times hits, they simply go back to their village where they still own house and land. If they can make it in the city, they buy a home here and become so called "New City Dweller". That is why you see hundreds million people migrating between cities and villages around Chinese New Year, but you don't see slums in Chinese cities.