On 22 December 2001, following the defeat of the Taliban by a coalition of
US and Northern Alliance forces, an interim administration under Hamid
Karzai mandated from above by the Bonn peace agreement took charge of
Afghanistan. Being a relatively small, landlocked and poor country that
has experienced civil strife for more than two decades starting 1979, with
different degrees of external involvement, Afghanistan's economy at the
time of formation of the interim administration was both backward and
disintegrated. With 85 per cent of its population reportedly dependent on
agriculture and 53 per cent of the GDP estimated as originating in the
agricultural, livestock and forestry sectors, as compared with 28 per cent
in light industry, 8 per cent in trade and 6 per cent in construction, the
economy in 2002 was structurally in an early stage of development.
Extremely rough estimates quoted by the Asian Development Bank suggest
that in 2002, Afghanistan's GDP amounted to $4.4 billion, which implied a
GDP per capita of an abysmally low $170 per head.
These figures, however, could exaggerate the level of backwardness
implicit in the initial conditions from which Afghanistan must begin its
process of reconstruction and revival. Two factors have contributed to the
high 'aggregate poverty' indicated by a per capita income that is less
than half of the international poverty norm of a dollar per day per head
by 2001. The first is the war that led to the ouster of the Taliban. An
earlier estimate, also quoted by the ADB, relating to 1989, placed
Afghanistan's GDP at a much higher $6.9 billion and its per capita income
at around $300. The situation could have further improved in the years
following 1989, since reports indicate that at least in regions fully
occupied by the Taliban, economic conditions were stable during the early
and the mid-1990s. Underlying the subsequent massive contraction of the
economy was the war that devastated the limited infrastructure of the
country, triggered the exodus of more than 3 million refugees to Pakistan,
Iran and elsewhere and displaced a large number of people within the
country. This disrupted or even brought to a standstill much of the
economic activity within the country. A corollary of this role of the late
1990s war in worsening economic condition is that a concerted
reconstruction effort focused on quick-impact projects combined with the
observed large-scale return of refugees to Afghanistan, could ensure a
sharp rise in GDP and per capita income to levels in the early 1990s.
Secondly, nature too added to the woes of an already war-ravaged economy,
with protracted drought conditions that began in 1999 and lasted till
2001. Again according to estimates made by the international community, in
this case the World Bank, crop production was halved and livestock herds
substantially depleted, making the situation in 2002 as desperate as it
was. According to a March 2002 survey by the FAO, the livestock population
in the country declined by 60 per cent due to the distress selling of
livestock herds in the summer and autumn of 2001 triggered by the
persisting conditions of drought. The crucial role of drought in worsening
economic conditions is revealed by an FAO and World Food Programme
estimate which states that agricultural production in 2002 rose by 82 per
cent, following better rainfall conditions. However, even in that year
cereal production is estimated at 4 per cent below its 1998 level. Given
the importance of agriculture for employment and GDP in the economy, these
figures suggest that the rough GDP estimates relating to 2002 may be
exaggerating the poor state of the economy.
These real factors that perhaps exaggerate the extent of backwardness of
the economy could have been compounded by statistical errors that remain
uncorrected because of the temporary closure of the statistical system. It
is known that GDP and revenue estimates in Afghanistan are quite
unreliable given the large role of the unaccounted, underground economy in
the country. Two factors contribute to the magnitude of the unaccounted
segments of the economy. To start with, Afghanistan, being a landlocked
country, is also a hub for trade between some of its larger neighbours.
Such trade flows occur through its porous borders with Pakistan (2,450
km), Tajikistan (1,206 km), Iran (936 km), Turkmenistan (744 km),
Uzbekistan (137 km) and China (76 km). Unfortunately, figures on
Afghanistan's domestically directed and re-export trade are not available.
A June 2000–February 2001 UNDP study, based on an investigative survey of
border crossings and major trading centres, estimated that 'indigenous
exports' at $130 million constituted just 10.6 per cent of total exports,
while re-exports totalled $1097 million (Chart 1). Similarly, imports for
domestic consumption, based on type of commodity, amounted to $396 million
(33 per cent), whereas imports that were potentially for re-export
totalled $806 million (Chart 2). It is to be expected that the huge volume
of transit or re-export trade would sustain an economy whose activities
are not fully captured in estimates of GDP tracking the real economy. The
fact that much of this trade is not officially accounted for is well
known, so that profits accruing to Afghan nationals from such trade (in
which exports account for more than a quarter of estimated 2002 GDP) are
also likely to be inadequately captured by national income figures.
Chart 1 >>
Chart 2 >>
The second reason why the magnitude of the unaccounted economy is likely
to be great is the historically important role of poppy cultivation and
opium production in the rural Afghan economy. According to an estimate by
the United Nations Office for Drug Control and Crime Prevention, land
under poppy cultivation amounted to 82,171 hectares in 2000 and opium
production in 2002 was 3,400 tons, which was similar to levels that
prevailed in the mid-to-late 1990s. With the Taliban having imposed a ban
on opium production and the Karzai government having declared a ban on
poppy cultivation in 2002, it is inevitable that a large part of this
activity would occur in the underground economy. The economy surrounding
the cultivation of poppy, the production of opium and its trade would
generate a significant income, which again will go substantially
unrecorded.
Ignoring the potential areas for rapid reconstruction of war-damaged
assets, the effect of prolonged drought and the important role of
unrecorded economy tends to exaggerate the poor initial conditions, which
are then attributed solely to the long years of conflict. This is not to
say that the two-decade-long war had no serious consequences. To start
with, it did have damaging effects on the infrastructure of the country,
created by the historically important role of foreign aid in the country
because of its strategic and transit trade importance, making agriculture
more climate dependent, fragmenting the economy by damaging the
transportation and communications infrastructure and generating
bottlenecks in sectors like energy. Secondly, by driving out large
sections of the population and emasculating the state it undermined the
institutions of state including the central bank, the financial system,
tax collection and customs machinery, the statistical apparatus, the civil
service, and the law and order and judicial system. Finally, it undermined
the ability of the state to collect a share of the surplus being generated
within the economy to finance the expenditures necessary to take on
crucial governance and development responsibilities.
With regard to the last of these effects, we must recall that local
revenue in Afghanistan comes from its taxes on trade, much of which occurs
by land across the borders with its neighbours. A major problem being
faced by the current government in Kabul is to get provincial governors
(still referred to as warlords by many) to part with a reasonable share of
the revenue thus garnered. Even though a meeting in May saw twelve
governors signing an agreement to do so, and one of them delivered $20
million immediately thereafter, it is unclear how much of the revenue will
finally accrue to the central government.
Once these features of the Afghan economy are understood and the
unwarranted hopelessness deriving from perceptions of near-complete
devastation and penury is set aside, the direction of the aid-supported
reconstruction effort and its likely consequences can be easily deduced.
There are three pillars on which that effort should rest: (i) restoration
of the infrastructure with initial focus on quick-impact projects that can
yield substantial benefits in a short period; (ii) restoration of the
institutions of state and the powers of those institutions so that the
state can mobilize the revenues and undertake crucial developmental
expenditures, which only it can pursue since low per capita income levels
imply inadequate incentives for private investment in many areas; and
(iii) restoration of the 'economic space' within which the new state can
pursue a national development agenda.
A range of specific initiatives can be identified within this overall
framework. To begin with, a greater degree of security and an end to
periodic local conflict must be ensured. This must build on the intense
and easily observed desire of the Afghan people for peace and the
opportunity to get on with their lives and must be secured only by an
international, UN-mandated force that is seen as a source of support and
not an instrument of occupation. Second, the damaged and destroyed
infrastructure must be immediately reconstructed, with a large proportion
of aid diverted for the purpose, so that the economy is reintegrated and
rendered functional.
Third, the ability of the state to mobilize resources needed to finance
crucial developmental responsibilities must be restored for which an
appropriate monitoring, tax collection and revenue sharing system must be
worked out. Given the fact that Iran and Pakistan account for a
substantial share of Afghanistan's trade, and trade revenues constitute a
large share of the total, the initial task should not be too difficult.
But over time, it would be necessary to widen the tax base and obtain
resources from internal direct and indirect taxation, especially the
former.
Fourth, it would be necessary to rebuild the financial system with a
two-fold purpose: that of mobilizing household savings and of channelizing
those savings to priority areas, using mechanisms such as directed credit
and differential interest rates. This implies that an overemphasis on
microfinance and any neglect of the task of creating a well-regulated
formal banking system would be misplaced. Fifth, the rural infrastructure
needed to restore dynamism to agriculture, reduce dependence on rainfall
for irrigation and encourage growth of non-agricultural activities needs
to be created by the state.
Finally, Afghanistan needs to move out of being a mere transit hub for
trade between its neighbours and must seek to develop activities that add
value to imported inputs to produce outputs for export and benefit to a
greater extent from its crucial role in regional trade. The problem with
the transit trade is not that it adversely affects the balance of
payments. The field survey-based estimates quoted above show that though
there was a small deficit in terms of the indigenously directed and
originating trade, Afghanistan did not suffer from a trade imbalance that
needed significant external financing. The real difficulty is that
unregulated growth of such trade creates disincentives for investment
aimed at increasing domestic employment and value-added through processing
and production activities within Afghanistan.
Is this the direction in which the ostensibly UN-coordinated
reconstruction effort is heading to? Expectations were high when, soon
after the Bonn agreement that signalled peace, a meeting of donors in
Tokyo in January 2000 pledged to deliver sums, estimated at an aggregate
of $4.5 billion within a thirty-month period, to kick-start the
reconstruction effort. But a visit to Kabul, the capital city, close to a
year-and-a-half thereafter suggests that the process of reconstruction has
been slow. The inadequacy of the reconstruction effort is puzzling also
because the limited and scattered information on aid flows does suggest
that inflows have been significant even if not massive.