INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Afghanistan continued to face a severe liquidity crisis this quarter with access to physical bank notes constrained and banks facing major
liquidity challenges due to declining economic activity, lack of trust in the banking center among Afghans, and an inability to transact
internationally.The US Special Inspector General for Afghanistan (SIGAR) said in its latest quarterly report that Da Afghanistan Bank (DAB),
Afghanistan&s central bank, will require significant technical support from the international community to tackle these challenges.The
report stated that prior to the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan&s (IEA) takeover in August last year, Afghanistan&s financial system had been
underdeveloped relative to the context of its growth in recent decades, with a low assets-to-GDP ratio and a heavily dollarized banking
system.Approximately 60% of deposits in the country were made in foreign currency
The report stated that in this monetary environment, maintaining financial stability requires both domestic currency (AFN) liquidity and,
more importantly, foreign exchange (FX) liquidity.However, DAB is limited in its ability to control the AFN monetary supply and value due to
several factors including the lack of domestic technical capabilities to print currency, which Afghanistan outsources to foreign
companies.For years, DAB would prop up the value of the afghani (AFN) by regularly auctioning US dollars pulled from its foreign reserves
Prior to August 2021, Afghanistan&s central bank reportedly received quarterly shipments of $249 million in US banknotes from its foreign
This stopped after the Taliban (IEA) takeover prompted the United States to place a hold on US-based Afghan central bank reserves.The loss
of these US dollar transfers and other sources of foreign currency plunged Afghanistan&s financial system into free fall,& SIGAR stated.With
Afghanistan&s international reserves, including banking sector foreign exchange deposits at the DAB, frozen; the SWIFT system and
international settlements suspended; grant transfers suspended; and AFN liquidity printing interrupted, a dramatic adverse shock in the
financial and payment systems ensued.The resulting liquidity crisis has caused salary disruptions for hundreds of thousands of government
employees, teachers, and health-care workers, and has imposed limitations on the operations of international aid groups in the country.The
banking system is totally paralyzed
The central bank is not operating,& according to Robert Mardini, director general for the International Committee of the Red Cross as cited
by SIGAR.Mardini said that his organization is instead paying 10,000 doctors and nurses via the informal hawala money-transfer system.This
has also contributed to a worsening domestic credit market
In the absence of international support, banks have ceased extending new credit to small- and medium-sized enterprises.In recent months, the
increased supply of US dollars from humanitarian channels, averaging around $150 million per month, has helped stabilize the value of the
afghani.However, these humanitarian channels are viewed as stopgap measures that are an insufficient substitute for the normal functioning
of a central bank, SIGAR stated.In her March 2 statement to the UN Security Council, UNAMA head Deborah Lyons cited the &lack of access to
hard currency reserves, lack of liquidity, and constraints on the central bank to carry out some of its core functions& as key challenges to
reviving the Afghan economy.Total international DAB reserves were $9.76 billion at the end of 2020, according to the most recent data
Of this amount, $2 billion was deposited in financial institutions in the United Kingdom, Germany, Switzerland, and the United Arab
Emirates.Some $7 billion in DAB reserve funds deposited at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York are now frozen by the US
government.Economists at New York University and the University of Chicago suggested that if central-bank reserves were placed directly with
households or with other financial intermediaries, it could enhance the desired increase in liquidity.Liquidity is a concern for households
as well as for the banking system and businesses
Raising household liquidity in Afghanistan is challenged by rising unemployment, the fact that only 10&20% of Afghans have bank accounts,
the uncertain status of DAB&s electronic payment system and the declining volume of market transactions as reflected in the country&s
declining GDP.SIGAR stated however that the Biden Administration is currently exploring possible avenues for disbursing $3.5 billion of the
frozen assets for humanitarian relief efforts, possibly through a separate trust fund or by providing support through the United Nations or
another enabling organization.US Special Representative for Afghanistan Thomas West has stated that the $3.5 billion could alternatively
contribute toward ''the potential recapitalization of a future central bank [in Afghanistan] and the recapitalization of a financial
system.The move to freeze assets meanwhile sparked outrage throughout Afghan society, including among leaders unaffiliated with the IEA.Shah
Mehrabi, a long-time member of the Afghan central bank&s board of governors, called the decision &unconscionable& and &short-sighted.Mehrabi
argued that the central bank should be treated as independent of the IEA regime, and that depriving the bank of its reserves could lead to
''total collapse of the banking system& and further hurt millions of Afghans suffering in the economic and humanitarian crises.The order to
freeze assets has also drawn criticism from US and international policy analysts, human rights groups, lawyers, and financial experts, SIGAR
reported.Analysts have expressed concern over both the seizure of the reserves and the reported proposals to provide those funds in the form
of humanitarian assistance.Paul Fishstein of NYU&s Center on International Cooperation argues that the executive order gave inadequate
attention to the macroeconomic collapse of the country.Fishstein said the release of the central bank&s reserves could instead be used to
restore unnecessary exchange rate stability and ease the liquidity crisis.William Byrd of the US Institute of Peace (USIP) said that even if
only half of DAB&s total reserves are devoted to support its basic activities as a central bank, it would &provide an opportunity to make a
start toward stabilizing the economy and private sector.The post Liquidity crisis at core of Afghanistan&s economic challenges: SIGAR first