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Afghanistan must avoid becoming geopolitical battlefield

It is time to build Afghanistan by making efforts to resume economic activities, trade, investment, and aid by cautiously playing its cards….reports Asian Lite News

It is important for Afghanistan that it remains focused on economic revival post-Covid and political upheaval. Afghanistan cannot afford to get trapped in internal political turmoil or become a victim of the geopolitical traps of neighbouring countries or global powers, The Khaama Press News Agency reported.

It is time to build Afghanistan by making efforts to resume economic activities, trade, investment, and aid by cautiously playing its cards. The priorities of the country could not be blurred in view of the fact that by mid-2022, two-thirds of Afghan households had come to the brink and could not afford food and other non-food items. The Khaama Press News Agency is an independent and non-political news organization established in 2010 by a team of highly committed and professional journalists led by Khushnood Nabizada to empower free press and journalism in Afghanistan.

The Taliban government’s capacity to reverse the “cascading” economic crisis crucially depends on the resumption of international aid, resuscitating economic activities and creating a conducive business environment, The Khaama Press News Agency reported.

All these things would depend vitally on the Taliban government’s efforts to convince the Western powers to a smooth transition to a representative government and maintain a commitment to human rights. It is also important to mobilize humanitarian support including food and medicine from the countries with which Afghanistan has enjoyed friendship for a long.

A World Bank report has rightly expressed concern that the “political crisis of August 15, 2021, morphed into an economic confidence crisis” in Afghanistan.

It says further that cessation of aid caused a collapse in aggregate demand, job losses and economic deprivation as the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) contracted by 20.7 per cent in 2021, The Khaama Press News Agency reported.

The country’s balance of trade is adverse with imports of USD 7 billion and legal exports at USD 2 billion in 2022, leaving a trade deficit of USD 5 billion.

While Afghanistan saw a partial resumption of aid (off-budget and smaller scale at about USD 3.5 billion compared to USD 9 billion in 2020), signs emerged by mid-2022 that the Afghan economy was settling around a fragile low-level equilibrium, yet the question of sustaining people’s livelihood still remains perplexing because of the substantial spillovers of the contraction of the aid-driven services and security sectors.

Taliban soldiers walk on a street in Kabul, Afghanistan, September 17, 2021. WANA (West Asia News Agency) via REUTERS ATTENTION EDITORS – THIS PICTURE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY – RC2LRP9O0ABB

Although headline inflation has come down from a peak of 18.35 in July 2022 to 3.5 per cent in February 2023, the price level still remains elevated. The political crisis has led to job losses and business opportunities which have made people’s lives miserable, The Khaama Press News Agency reported.

In the precarious economic scenario, it is very important for Afghanistan to remain cautious that no country gets access to its precious resources on unfavourable terms. Its copper and oil reserves attract international investors, but any desperate move on the part of the Afghan government to give access to investors without commensurate quid pro quo would not be desirable.

Economic diplomacy requires that the Afghan regime balances its ties with the Western and neighbouring development partners. This means that it is a better strategy for Afghanistan to avoid the geopolitical tug of war in its territory for the strategic agenda of other countries.

Its economic diplomacy should be balanced by giving balancing stakes to all its development partners in connectivity and industrial projects and trade. Unrealistic and unsustainable debt-based models have already been proven risky and unsustainable in some South Asian neighbours, The Khaama Press News Agency reported.

A UN report highlighted in October 2022 that although Afghan people have “survived numerous resilience”, 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 of the economy.”

Afghanistan’s salvation would begin from its economic revival which depends on many other reforms, especially those which re-assure its development partners.

UNDP lamented that ten years of Afghan economic growth were reversed in just 12 months. But the Afghan regime is trying hard to bring back life to its economy. In its revival, the United Nations (UN) cash shipments for humanitarian and essential service support have helped significantly, The Khaama Press News Agency reported.

In January-February 2023, the UN has already shipped USD 440 billion to Afghanistan as against a cumulative USD 1.55 billion in 2022. Revenue collection for the first seven months of the fiscal 2022-23 has also seen remarkable improvement. But given the size of Afghanistan’s economic challenge, these could be seen as green shoots only.

Afghanistan must go miles before it succeeds in stabilizing its economy. It desperately needs the resumption of aid and investment. But for these to happen, Afghanistan needs to take visible actions. And even more importantly it needs to avert any strategic exploitation by any development partner or global power. (ANI)

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