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Labrish
Nyuuz
Ghana's agriculture suffers from political turnover and policy inconsistency
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[QUOTE="Munyaradzi Mafaro, post: 44357, member: 636"] Ghana keeps launching new farming programs every few years with fancy names and big promises. Leaders create slogans and hold ceremonies but farms still struggle with basic needs like fertilizer and support staff. Each new government throws out the previous plans and starts over from scratch. Political changes mess up farming progress across the country. New leaders rename programs or cut funding for projects that were already working. Extension officers lose direction and donor partners become worried about supporting unstable programs. Important information gets lost when teams change. Storage buildings and grain silos sit empty because nobody follows through after elections. Many were built decades ago but new governments ignore them completely. The cycle repeats with each political change leaving farmers confused about what help they can expect. Farmers face constant uncertainty about subsidies and support services. Fertilizer might be available one season but missing the next. Food prices jump around wildly because of poor planning and storage problems. Young people trained in agriculture programs graduate without any ongoing help. The country needs independent farming agencies that survive political changes. Digital systems should track crop data and farmer needs across all regions. Both major political parties must agree on basic food security goals that continue regardless of who wins elections. [/QUOTE]
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Labrish
Nyuuz
Ghana's agriculture suffers from political turnover and policy inconsistency
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