“The Taliban Have Claimed Afghanistan’s Real Economic Prize” (NYT):
How exactly the Taliban plan to keep all systems running, in one of the poorest countries of the world that depends on more than $4 billion a year in official aid and where foreign donors have been covering 75 percent of government spending, is an urgent question. The state’s bankruptcy has tempted some Western donors into thinking that financial pressure — in the form of threats to withhold humanitarian and development funding — could be brought to bear on the new rulers of Afghanistan. Germany already warned it would cut off financial support to the country if the Taliban “introduce Shariah law.”
But those hopes are misplaced. Even before their blitz into the capital over the weekend, the Taliban had claimed the country’s real economic prize: the trade routes — comprising highways, bridges and footpaths — that serve as strategic choke points for trade across South Asia. With their hands on these highly profitable revenue sources and with neighboring countries, like China and Pakistan, willing to do business, the Taliban are surprisingly insulated from the decisions of international donors. What comes next in the country is uncertain — but it’s likely to unfold without a meaningful exertion of Western power.
One reason foreign donors inflate their own importance in Afghanistan is that they do not understand the informal economy, and the vast amounts of hidden money in the war zone. Trafficking in opium, hashish, methamphetamines and other narcotics is not the biggest kind of trade that happens off the books: The real money comes from the illegal movement of ordinary goods, like fuel and consumer imports. In size and sum, the informal economy dwarfs international aid.
For example, our study of the border province of Nimruz, published this month by the Overseas Development Institute, estimated that informal taxation — the collection of fees by armed personnel to allow safe passage of goods — raised about $235 million annually for the Taliban and pro-government figures. By contrast, the province received less than $20 million a year in foreign aid.
In other words, Afghanistan is in some ways like a super filthy version of Switzerland.
Also interesting, Antonio Garcia Martinez on recent events:
… the cream of American society and the flower of its finest universities, can only understand the world as projections of the country’s own domestic neuroses. Our current elites, whether in media or politics, squint at the strange peoples and languages of whatever international conflict and only see who or what they can map to their internal gallery of heroes and villains: Who’s the PoC? Who’s the Nazi?
And if the situation can’t be mapped, such as Afghanistan or the recent protests in Cuba, it’s utterly ignored for being just completely beyond human comprehension or concern.
This is the true privilege of being an American in 2021 (vs. 1981): Enjoying an imperium so broad and blinding, you’re never made to suffer the limits of your understanding or re-assess your assumptions about a world that, even now, contains regions and peoples and governments antithetical to everything you stand for. If you fight demons, they’re entirely demons of your own creation, whether Cambridge Analytica or QAnon or the ‘insurrection’ or supposed electoral fraud or any of a host of bogeymen, and you get to tweet #resist while not dangling from the side of an airplane or risking your life on a raft to escape.
“In other words, Afghanistan is in some ways like a super filthy version of Switzerland.”
I think insulting the Taliban like this is uncalled for. They never assisted the Nazis in exfiltrating their looted gold, or provide money-laundering services to the world’s dictators and crime lords.
But otherwise, yes, high mountains and multiple ethnicities with different languages that can’t stand one another, check.
Fazal: I meant in terms of being able to collect massive tolls for passing through!
Switzerland is a lovely country, no irony.
“In other words, Afghanistan is in some ways like a super filthy version of Switzerland.”
In other words, Afghanistan is in some ways like a super filthy rich version of Switzerland. There I fixed it for you! Keep calm and carry on.
Why can’t all these Afghans dying on the tarmac appreciate the temple of political correctness that is the Bide man? Don’t they realize their still being alive would have entailed 4 more years of evil twitter posts?
With the price of ammo and how much we allegedly left behind the Taliban could do quite well if they can find a way to re-import it into America. Not to mention the Taliban’s new old American helicopters. Sell them to some sucker country that thinks you need them to defeat a super power.
Phrase “illegal movement of ordinary goods, like fuel and consumer imports” indicates that NYT is screwed up much more then Taliban
That was my observation too, and this “By contrast, the province received less than $20 million a year in foreign aid.” which doesn’t sync up with “4. Charitable donations – $240 million” [1]
But who cares about this numbers any more? They have over $1 Trillian of to play with as rare earth metals [2].
[1] https://theconversation.com/the-taliban-are-megarich-heres-where-they-get-the-money-they-use-to-wage-war-in-afghanistan-147411
[2] https://www.cnbc.com/2021/08/17/taliban-in-afghanistan-china-may-exploit-rare-earth-metals-analyst-says.html
Our country’s “informal taxation” is called Civil Asset Forfeiture. Steve Lehto on YouTube has had many episodes about it.
And the elites do not only fail to even attempt to understand other countries, they don’t even seriously try understand approximately half of their own. Like why aren’t middle-class Americans enthusiastic about importing everything from China so that “we” can focus on financial derivatives, and what could possibly go wrong from a financial, environmental, geopolitical, or supply-chain perspective? It’s obviously just “racism”, because since it’s not “sexism”, or “homophobia”, and everything else is just trivia.