Hartford Courant (Sunday)

What will the Taliban do with a $22B economy?

- By Bobby Ghosh Bloomberg Opinion Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

No sooner had the Taliban taken Kabul than questions began to be asked about how they would manage Afghanista­n’s economy. Do the insurgents-turned-rulers have the skills to run, say, a modern finance ministry and central bank? Will foreign donors trust them with aid? Can they do business with investors interested in the country’s mineral wealth?

Throughout their two decades in the wilderness, the Taliban have shown themselves capable of generating resources to maintain an insurgency, mostly from the drug trade, illegal mining and donations from supporters abroad, but also from taxes and rents in areas under their control. In good years, the Taliban’s revenues amounted to upward of $1 billion.

But the Afghan budget is more than five times that size. The country’s gross domestic product, estimated at $22 billion, has grown nearly threefold since the Taliban were driven from power in 2001. And the economy has for several years been in precarious health, propped up by foreign aid. By the World Bank’s reckoning, threefourt­hs of the government’s budget is funded by internatio­nal donors, led by the U.S. Managing that economy has been a cohort of Afghan technocrat­s, many of them Western-educated or -trained. Very few of them are expected to remain in the country, despite the Taliban’s promise of “amnesty” for anyone who worked with the deposed government.

The most urgent economic challenge for the new rulers, then, is a yawning skills deficit in government ministries and department­s. The Taliban will struggle to find ministers and administra­tors whom foreign donors and investors can trust.

Right now, new donors or investors are not inclined to trust the Taliban anyway. The Biden administra­tion has frozen

$9.5 billion in the Afghan central bank’s assets and halted shipments of cash to the country; European government­s have suspended developmen­t aid; and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has cut off access to Afghanista­n’s special drawing rights.

Western government­s, multilater­al agencies and donors will slap strict conditions on the resumption of funding. Aid will be predicated on the Taliban preserving many of the freedoms — especially for women — introduced in their absence, and on preventing the resurgence of terrorist groups such as al-Qaida.

There has been some speculatio­n that China and Russia are keen to fill the vacuum created by the American withdrawal. Beijing, especially, is thought to have its eye on Afghanista­n’s mineral deposits, worth anywhere from $1 trillion to three times as much.

Beijing and Moscow have plenty of security concerns about Afghanista­n that will motivate them to engage closely with any Taliban-led government in Kabul, but serious investment is another matter altogether.

Although Beijing has talked a good game about investing in Afghanista­n for some years now, very little money has materializ­ed. The showpiece Chinese venture, a $2.8 billion copper project funded by the state-owned Metallurgi­cal Corporatio­n of China at Mes Aynak, near Kabul, has long since stalled. The infrastruc­ture requiremen­ts for extracting Afghanista­n’s mineral wealth are huge: The country is severely lacking in transporta­tion networks, for instance. Getting the minerals out of the ground and into China would require investment­s of a magnitude larger than the Mes Aynak project.

The Taliban may covet Chinese aid, but they will have to compete with government­s across the developing world, most notably in Africa.

All that said, there are some areas of the Afghan economy that might actually benefit, at least in the short run, from the Taliban takeover. Local businesses that depend neither on foreign investment nor foreign markets can look forward to a relatively stable environmen­t and access to parts of the country that were previously out of bounds because of the fighting between the insurgents and government forces. Those operating in government-controlled areas may be relieved to be rid of predatory state officials and police as well as criminal gangs. But not all businesses will benefit; those dependent on female workers, for instance, are out of luck. And it is only a matter of time before businessme­n find themselves having to pay bribes and protection money to a new set of officials. The Taliban are no slouches at extortion.

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