The Bakersfield Californian

Economy on the brink, Taliban rely on ex-technocrat­s

- BY SAMYA KULLAB

KABUL, Afghanista­n — When the Taliban swept into power, they found Afghanista­n’s economy fast approachin­g the brink and were faced with harrowing prediction­s of growing poverty and hunger. So they ordered the financial managers of the collapsed former government back to work, with an urgent directive: Do your jobs, because we can’t.

In the 20 years since the Taliban last ruled, Afghanista­n evolved from an economy dealing mostly in illicit enterprise to a sophistica­ted, multi-billion-dollar system fueled by donor aid and internatio­nal trade. The Taliban, a movement borne out of the rural clergy, struggled to grasp the extent of the transforma­tion.

Four employees from financial institutio­ns told The Associated Press how the Taliban commanded bureaucrat­s from the previous government’s Finance Ministry, central bank and other state-owned banks to return to work. Their accounts were confirmed by three Taliban officials.

“They told us, ‘We are not experts, you know what is better for the country, how we can survive under these challenges’,” recalled one state bank official, who like others spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak on record.

They told him, “Do what you must,” but warned, “God is watching you, and you will be accountabl­e for what you do on

Judgment Day’.”

Quietly, these technocrat­s are advising the Taliban leadership in the running of the crippled financial sector. They tell them what to do and how to do it. But, as seasoned experts, they see no way out of Afghanista­n’s economic quagmire: With billions in internatio­nal funds frozen, the

best they can muster in domestic revenues is $500 million to $700 million, not enough to pay public salaries or provide basic goods and services.

The Taliban are buttressin­g relations with local businessme­n to keep them operating, while the leadership makes its case for internatio­nal recognitio­n in meetings with foreign officials.

The Taliban’s seizure of power in mid-August resulted in an abrupt halt to most donor funds. These disburseme­nts accounted for 45 percent of GDP and financed 75 percent of state expenditur­es, including public sector salaries. In 2019, total government expenditur­es were nearly $11 billion.

With drought ongoing as well, the United Nations predicts 95 percent of the population will go hungry and as much as 97 percent of the country risks sinking below the poverty line.

The United States froze billions in dollar reserves in line with internatio­nal sanctions against the Taliban, eroding the liquidity of both the central bank and commercial banks and constraini­ng their ability to make internatio­nal transactio­ns.

This has undermined internatio­nal trade, a mainstay of the Afghan economy. Intermedia­ry banks abroad are reluctant to engage in transactio­ns given sanctions risks. Informal trade, however, continues. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund predicts the economy will contract sharply.

In the Finance Ministry and central bank, near daily meetings revolve around procuring basic staples like flour to ward off hunger, centralizi­ng customs collection­s and finding revenue sources amid critical shortages in household goods. In Afghanista­n, all fuel oil, 80 percent of electricit­y and up to 40 percent of wheat is imported.

 ?? BERNAT ARMANGUE / AP FILE ?? In this Sept. 12 file photo, Afghans wait in front of a bank as they try to withdraw money in Kabul, Afghanista­n. With Afghan assets frozen in the U.S. and the world reluctant to recognize the Taliban, the country’s banking system has come to a halt.
BERNAT ARMANGUE / AP FILE In this Sept. 12 file photo, Afghans wait in front of a bank as they try to withdraw money in Kabul, Afghanista­n. With Afghan assets frozen in the U.S. and the world reluctant to recognize the Taliban, the country’s banking system has come to a halt.

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