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700,000 Jobs vanished– Afghan economy lost nearly US $5 billion after August 2021 and is reversing: UNDP

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New Delhi: A year after the Taliban takeover in Afghanistan, the country faces “cascading crises” and a crippled economy that humanitarian aid alone cannot address, according to a new report released today by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).

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The report calculates that the already-declining Afghan economy lost nearly US$5 billion after August 2021 and is reversing “in 12 months what had taken 10 years to accumulate.”

The cost of a basket of essentials needed to avoid food poverty has meanwhile risen 35 per cent, forcing poorer households to go deeper into debt or sell off assets just to survive. Nearly 700,000 jobs have vanished, further threatening a population reeling from the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, conflict, drought, and war in Ukraine.

“The Afghan people have been relentlessly subjected to extremely difficult circumstances. They have survived numerous challenges in the last 40 years and shown enormous resilience. Yet the last 12 months have brought cascading crises: a humanitarian emergency; massive economic contraction; and the crippling of its banking and financial systems in addition to denying access to secondary education to girls and the restrictions on women’s mobility and participation in the economy,” the report, “One Year in Review: Afghanistan Since August 2021,” concludes.

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“Afghanistan has experienced an economic implosion over the past 12 months and the UN’s strong, coordinated response to the crisis has proved critical in averting a catastrophe last winter.

Building upon what worked last year including tailored efforts across multiple sectors to improve the livelihoods of more than half a million people, there is a pressing need to support further measures to prevent a deeper crisis," said UNDP Administrator Achim Steiner, who is worried as second winters are around the corner.

Expanded connectivity, livelihoods, and rights needed

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The report paints a bleak fiscal picture of the country, dating back more than a decade before the transition of August 2021. With GDP in steady decline since 2008, Afghanistan had come to rely on international aid to sustain its economy, which accounted for 75 per cent of total government spending and nearly 40 per cent of GDP at the time of transition. But foreign donors largely suspended aid after the transition.

“Two decades of heavy dependence on international aid and imports, a lack of industrialization and competitiveness, and limited mobility and connectivity among regions, among other factors, have hindered Afghanistan’s forward momentum,” the report says.

UNDP analysis forecast that restricting women from working can result in an economic loss of up to US$1 billion – or up to five per cent of the country’s GDP.

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“The rights of women and girls are critical for the future of Afghanistan,” said UNDP Asia-Pacific Director Kanni Wignaraja. “It starts with education and continues with equal opportunity when it comes to employment and pays. UNDP made the support to women-owned businesses front and centre of its aid activities: we provided support to 34,000 women-owned small businesses. Our goal is to reach 50,000 women-owned businesses by the end of this year.”

Key findings in the report, “One Year in Review: Afghanistan Since August 2021”:

The price of a food basket, with the minimum calories to escape food poverty, has surged 35 per cent since August 2021.

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Nearly 700,000 jobs were lost by mid-2022.

Among jobs women have lost in government ministries and entities, more than 14,000 or 82 per cent were in the Ministry of Education, following restrictions on girls’ education.

A shrinking licit economy has increased the share of the illicit economy to 12-18 per cent of GDP, from about 9-14 per cent a year ago.

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A severe liquidity crisis has affected financial services; the microfinance sector has nearly collapsed, hitting poor and female borrowers hardest.

Nearly 20 million people face high and critical levels of food insecurity since August 2021, almost twice the average in the preceding three years.

Children under five face a serious threat of severe acute malnutrition, particularly in the south.

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