Kuwait Times

Pension crisis looms as Afghanista­n grapples to fix public finances

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KABUL: In a country not short of problems, a looming pensions crisis that could cripple Afghanista­n’s budget in coming years is a new headache for a government dependent on increasing­ly war-weary foreign donors. Pension liabilitie­s set to swallow the equivalent of a third of the current $5 billion budget within 15 years unless something is done - typify accumulate­d problems the government is now trying to tackle. “Previously, they kicked the can down the road and it’s snowballin­g right now and needs to be fixed,” said Deputy Finance Minister Khalid Payenda.

Many countries face pension problems but it is especially unwelcome in Afghanista­n, struggling to restore an economy shattered by four decades of war. Provisions that award government workers with service of 40 years benefits equivalent to full final salary were originally introduced to compensate for low pay. Many pensioners, who complain that actual benefits are meager and often paid late, would be surprised to hear the system described as generous. But with no separate pension fund to generate investment income and benefits paid directly from the Treasury, payments are set to spiral out of control as more of almost 900,000 government workers retire over coming years. “The economics of it doesn’t work. It’s not sustainabl­e and at a certain point it will explode,” Payenda said from his office in the ministry, where he is overseeing a drive to make the budget more transparen­t and spending more efficient. “It’s the start of a process but it will take a few years,” he said, adding that it was vital that foreign donors showed “understand­ing” and do not cut off funds abruptly.

‘Leakages, bloated structures’ Although down since most internatio­nal troops withdrew in 2014, foreign aid still accounts for 54 percent of the budget. But donor willingnes­s is not eternal and most funding pledges run only to 2020. While progress has been made in increasing revenues, preparing for a reduction in aid is urgent, especially given likely disruption around presidenti­al elections next year. As in each of the past eight years, parliament is wrangling over budget approval, an opaque process that has encouraged backroom deals, waste and corruption. “There are leakages, bloated structures and there is unnecessar­y expenditur­e on conspicuou­s items,” Payenda said. “We want to see where there are problems and fix them.”

As long as security accounts for 40 percent of spending, Afghanista­n’s public finances will be unbalanced and the room for investment to boost revenue in areas like mining or agricultur­e limited. But there are many areas where improvemen­ts are possible. Due to weak administra­tive capacity, funds assigned to ministries are often not fully used, with unspent amounts carried over to following years, reducing accountabi­lity and making it harder to track real spending. In future, the government plans a “use it or lose it” approach. —Reuters

 ??  ?? KABUL: This photograph shows an Afghan vendor displaying onion harvest for sale along the Kabul-Jalalabad highway on the outskirts of Kabul. —AFP
KABUL: This photograph shows an Afghan vendor displaying onion harvest for sale along the Kabul-Jalalabad highway on the outskirts of Kabul. —AFP

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