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Ghana is expected to realise the full benefits of its land reforms agenda in the next 20 years from the start of its implementation.
This is the projection made by the Senior Lecturer at the University of Ghana School of Law, Kwame Gyan.
Speaking to
Newsfile host, Samson Lardy Anyenini Saturday, he said Ghana’s land reforms which began in 2003, are long term initiatives whose benefits will take time to manifest.
“The World Bank put in a lot of money to help Ghana fix the land administration system. But land reforms are long term national objectives. If you want to reap the dividends of a proper land reform agenda, you should be looking towards not less than two decades before you can really feel that something has changed on the ground. You are not looking at anything below 15 years,” he said.