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Afghanistan's Failing Economy Taking Afghans With It
World

Afghanistan's Failing Economy Taking Afghans With It

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Story Highlights

  • 87% said it is difficult to get by on current household income
  • Three in four Afghans struggling to afford food
  • Record-high nine in 10 said their local economy is getting worse

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Months after the Taliban's takeover of Afghanistan, the country's economic prospects remain grim, with some estimates placing 97% of Afghans below the poverty line by mid-2022.

The latest Â鶹´«Ã½AV data from Afghanistan offer a similarly bleak assessment, showing that Afghans surveyed as the Taliban took control in 2021 were almost universally struggling to get by on their household income. Most were finding it difficult to afford food, and almost no one saw their local economy as getting better. This situation is only likely to get worse as the effect of Russia's invasion of Ukraine ripples across global food markets.

Nearly Nine in 10 Struggling on Current Household Income

The majority of Afghans (87%) said they were finding it "difficult" or "very difficult" to get by on their present household income. But hard economic times are not a new phenomenon in Afghanistan. Since 2017, no less than 84% of Afghans have reported they were finding it difficult to get by, and no more than 14% said they were getting by or living comfortably.

Line graph. Afghans' views of about their current household incomes. In 2021, 87% of Afghans reported finding in very difficult or difficult to get by on their current income.

Since the Taliban took over the country in August, the value of Afghan currency has declined precipitously, losing as much as 11% of its value against the U.S. dollar in a single day in December. At the same time as the value of Afghans' money has dropped, unemployment has surged, with an estimated 500,000 Afghans having lost their jobs since the Taliban retook power.

Money for Food, Shelter a Problem for Most Afghans

According to the World Food Programme, food prices in Afghanistan have risen by nearly 40% in the past eight months. An estimated 95% of Afghans do not have enough to eat or enough money for food.

At the time of the survey, three in four Afghans (75%) said there had been times in the past 12 months that they did not have enough money for food. This is the highest level in Â鶹´«Ã½AV's trend since 2008, though it is statistically similar to the 72% of Afghans who said the same in 2019.

Line graph. 75% of Afghans report having lacked money for food in the last 12 months, up from 72% in 2019. Additionally, 59% of Afghans report having lacked money for shelter in the last year, up from 52% in 2019.

In addition to lacking money for food, 58% of Afghans also reported lacking enough money for adequate shelter in the past 12 months. This is the highest level since 2008, when 64% of Afghans reported that they did not have enough money for shelter.

Record-High Pessimism About the Economy

Afghans were also nearly universally pessimistic about where their economy is headed. A record-high 89% of Afghans said their local economy is getting worse. Afghans' pessimistic views of their local economy mirror the United Nations' prediction that the country's GDP will likely shrink by at least 20% after the Taliban's takeover.

Line graph. 89% of Afghans say their local economies are getting worse, up from 70% who said the same in 2019.

Bottom Line

Since the Taliban seized power last August, Afghanistan has been frozen out of much-needed global aid, making life increasingly unbearable for residents who struggled long before the U.S. withdrawal.

Without a sustained, large-scale humanitarian intervention, conditions for the Afghan people will continue to deteriorate. Such an intervention appears unlikely to happen anytime soon, with billions of the former government's assets still frozen. The World Bank has transferred hundreds of millions of dollars to UNICEF to provide immediate assistance, and the United States Agency for International Development has announced it will provide an additional $308 million in humanitarian aid to Afghanistan in 2022 -- but this still falls far short of the U.N.'s $4.5 billion funding appeal to assist those Afghans who are most at risk.

These funds will also not go nearly as far as they might have, given the increased prices for food around the globe in recent weeks. Aid agencies have estimated that costs to provide humanitarian assistance to Afghans may rise by up to 20% because of the war in Ukraine.

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