POLITICAL leaders have been im­plored to adopt national development strategies that transcend partisan divides to ensure sustained progress.According to Professor Michael Kwankye, an Associate Professor at the Regional Institute for Population Studies (RIPS) at the University of Ghana, the prevailing tendency for each political party to vilify and discard the initiatives of its predecessor is detrimen­tal to advancement.He articulated this perspective in an exclu­sive interview with The Ghanaian Times in Accra on Thursday."We require a coherent national vision, rather than a cyclical pattern where each new administration forsakes the endeavours of the previous one," he asserted."Nation-building should resemble the construction of a skyscraper; each generation contributes a new level, rather than demolish­ing the existing structure."He drew a parallel to the construction of a house, wherein each successive government should build upon the foundation laid by its predecessor, rather than commencing anew."It's akin to erecting a house.

Your father may construct the ground floor.

Then you might add the gallery.

Subsequently, the children will come and continue the work," he elaborated.Furthermore, Prof.