Punjab, Pakistan has just transformed its land record management system. What can we learn?

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Land is an essential resource for sustainable development. From large cities to remote villages, land remains one of the most important assets for many people, especially the poor. 

Worldwide, only 3 out of 10 people have a legally registered title to their land . Difficulties associated with land administration and registration systems, together with inequalities of land distribution and tenure insecurity, often hinder social and economic development.

In Pakistan, the province of Punjab faced such a challenge. For many rural landowners in the province, land titles weren’t easily accessible, nor were they properly managed and protected. To tackle the land administration challenge, the government of Punjab turned to an innovative solution: they used digital technology to modernize its old, inefficient paper-based land administration system.

Supported by the World Bank, the Punjab Land Records Management and Information Systems (LRMIS) project turned out to be one of the success stories for the province of Punjab. Within just five years, Punjab scanned 10 million pages of old records, digitized over 55 million landowners’ records—98% of all records—across the province, and made all rural land title information available online 24/7 for landowners.


Prior to the project, it would take up to two months to complete a land transaction in Punjab. Today, it takes a rural Punjab resident only 50 minutes to receive a digitally recorded, legally registered land title from one of the 144 newly created land record offices across all 36 districts of the province. This has helped the province of Punjab enhance the transparency of land administration while securing land rights for its people, including women farmers who were denied their land rights in the old system.

In this video, World Bank Senior Director Ede Ijjasz-Vasquez (@Ede_WBG) and Muhammad Zafar Iqbal, Director General of Punjab Land Records Authority, discuss in detail the past, present, and future of the Punjab LRMIS project.



Going forward, the government of Punjab plans to expand digital land record management to its urban areas. Cities and villages alike in other countries can also learn from this successful project and innovative approach to land administration. 

Viewing guide

  • 0:30 – What was the situation of land records like in Punjab prior to the project?
  • 1:26 – What were the results of the project?
  • 2:38 – How have women and poor farmers benefited from the project?
  • 3:45 – Going forward, what’s needed to improve land administration further in Punjab?
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Authors

Rana Khalid Mehmood
September 28, 2017

I am PhD Scholar in Economics and conducting research on SDGs....This kind of report is helpful to pursue my research