Afghanistan's poverty rate rises as economy suffers
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[May 07, 2018]
By Rupam Jain
KABUL (Reuters) - Afghanistan's poverty
rate has worsened sharply over the past five years as the economy has
stalled and the Taliban insurgency has spread, with more than half the
population living on less than a dollar a day, a survey published on
Monday showed.
The Afghanistan Living Conditions Survey (ALCS), a joint study by the
European Union and Afghanistan's Central Statistics Organisation, showed
the national poverty rate rising to 55 percent in 2016-17 from 38
percent in 2011-12.
"The high poverty rates represent the combined effect of stagnating
economic growth, increasing demographic pressures, and a deteriorating
security situation," Shubham Chaudhuri, World Bank director for
Afghanistan, said in a commentary about the survey.
The report underlines the problems facing the Western-backed government
in Kabul which needs economic growth to help replace foreign aid and to
provide jobs for its fast-growing population.
As international forces have withdrawn and the billions of dollars in
foreign aid that once poured in have dried up, Afghanistan's battered
agricultural economy has struggled.
More than a decade and a half after a U.S.-led campaign toppled the
Taliban in 2001, the poverty line was defined as an income of 70
afghanis, or about one U.S. dollar, per person a day.
The ALCS report comes at a time when 20 of Afghanistan's 34 provinces
are suffering from serious drought and international aid agencies are
seeking millions of dollars to help them.
Food insecurity has risen from 30.1 percent to 44.6 percent in five
years, meaning many more people are forced to sell their land, take
their children out of school to work or depend on food aid, the survey
found.
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A car pasts behind a oil prices board d at Ahmad Yar Group fuel
station shows on outskirt of Kabul, Afghanistan January 27, 2016.
REUTERS/Mohammad Ismail
Chaudhuri said the survey was the first estimate of the economic situation since
Afghan forces took over security responsibilities in 2014 from international
troops.
"In recent years, as population growth outstripped economic growth, an increase
in poverty was inevitable," he said on the World Bank blog site.
The survey found that 50 percent of the population is younger than 15.
This month, President Ashraf Ghani's government said it had listed job creation
among its priorities and aimed at creating 2.1 million jobs within three years.
However, according to the IMF, the economy is set to grow at 2.5-3 percent in
2017-18, too slowly to stop unemployment from rising.
The needs to produce some 400,000 new jobs a year to keep pace with population
growth and tens of thousands of qualified people struggle to find work in
cities, and farmers were unable to earn a sustainable livelihood due to the
drought.
Officials at the European Union said the ALCS report was based on data collected
from 21,000 households over 12 months.
(Editing by James Mackenzie, Robert Birsel)
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