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Home US & CANADA

Selling children to survive: Afghan fathers forced to make impossible choices

by Yogita Limaye
May 18, 2026
in US & CANADA
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Selling children to survive: Afghan fathers forced to make impossible choices

Abdul Rashid Azimi says he is prepared to sell one of his daughters to feed the others

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The Economic Paralysis of Afghanistan: A Systemic Analysis of Humanitarian Failure

The current socio-economic landscape in Afghanistan has reached a point of critical failure, characterized by a systemic inability of the vast majority of the population to secure the fundamental requirements for human survival. Recent data indicates a staggering reality: three out of every four Afghans are currently unable to meet their basic needs. This metric is not merely a reflection of temporary scarcity but is indicative of a profound structural collapse within the nation’s internal markets, coupled with an external isolation that has effectively severed the country from the global financial architecture. As the nation grapples with the transition from an aid-reliant economy to a sequestered state, the resulting vacuum has precipitated a humanitarian emergency of unprecedented proportions.

The transition following the geopolitical shifts in late 2021 resulted in the immediate suspension of most non-humanitarian international assistance, which previously accounted for approximately 40 percent of the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and roughly 75 percent of its public expenditure. The sudden withdrawal of these capital flows, combined with the freezing of nearly $9 billion in central bank assets held abroad, has induced a liquidity crisis that permeates every level of the Afghan economy. From large-scale infrastructure projects to the purchasing power of individual households, the absence of a functional monetary transmission mechanism has rendered the pursuit of basic subsistence an insurmountable challenge for 75 percent of the population.

Structural Constraints and the Liquidity Crisis

At the core of the current crisis is a crippled banking sector that lacks the liquidity necessary to support routine commercial activity. The freezing of foreign reserves and the imposition of international sanctions have effectively isolated Afghanistan’s financial institutions from the SWIFT international payment system. This isolation has made it nearly impossible for local businesses to engage in import-export activities, leading to a severe shortage of essential goods, including pharmaceuticals, fuel, and specialized agricultural inputs. Without these inputs, the internal supply chain has stagnated, driving the prices of existing inventory beyond the reach of the average citizen.

Furthermore, the collapse of the formal labor market has exacerbated the situation. The cessation of international development projects led to the immediate unemployment of hundreds of thousands of skilled and semi-skilled workers. This loss of income, paired with hyperinflation in the food and energy sectors, has created a “scissors effect” where household revenues are plummeting at the exact moment that the cost of survival is skyrocketing. For many families, the struggle is no longer about upward mobility or education, but about the daily procurement of caloric requirements and clean water, resources that are increasingly becoming luxuries in a decimated marketplace.

Household Vulnerability and the Erosion of Social Safety Nets

The statistic that three-quarters of the population cannot meet basic needs translates to a profound erosion of the Afghan social fabric. In the absence of state-sponsored social security or a functional public health system, the burden of survival has fallen entirely on household resilience, which is rapidly being exhausted. Many families have turned to desperate coping mechanisms, including the sale of productive assets, the accumulation of unsustainable debt, and the reduction of meal frequency. This widespread deprivation is creating a generational deficit in nutrition and health that will have long-term implications for the country’s future human capital.

The healthcare sector provides a stark illustration of this vulnerability. With the withdrawal of international funding that previously supported the majority of the country’s clinics, the delivery of essential medical services has become localized and sporadic. Preventable diseases and malnutrition-related illnesses are on the rise, further straining the limited resources of families who are already spending upwards of 80 percent of their income on food. This cycle of poverty and ill-health creates a feedback loop that is difficult to break without significant external intervention and the restoration of basic institutional functionality.

Institutional Obstacles and the International Policy Impasse

The humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan is compounded by a complex diplomatic and regulatory environment. The international community faces a profound “humanitarian-political dilemma”: how to provide life-saving assistance and stabilize the economy without providing direct financial legitimacy or resources to the current de facto authorities. While humanitarian exemptions to sanctions exist, the “over-compliance” of international banks and shipping companies often prevents aid organizations from moving the necessary funds and goods into the country efficiently. This friction in the aid delivery mechanism results in delays that, in a fragile environment, translate directly into increased mortality and hardship.

Moreover, the suspension of long-term development aid in favor of short-term emergency relief is a strategy that addresses the symptoms rather than the causes of the collapse. Emergency food distributions are vital for immediate survival, but they do not rebuild markets, restore the power grid, or provide the employment necessary for long-term stability. The current institutional deadlock prevents the implementation of “humanitarian plus” programs,initiatives designed to support basic services like education, water management, and infrastructure,leaving the country in a state of perpetual emergency where three-quarters of the population remains reliant on unpredictable external charity for their most basic requirements.

Concluding Analysis: The Path Toward Economic Stabilization

The data suggesting that 75 percent of Afghans cannot meet their basic needs serves as a definitive indictment of the current economic trajectory. To move beyond this state of paralysis, a shift in strategy is required from both the internal administration and the international community. Continued reliance on emergency caloric support is a fiscal and moral palliative that fails to address the underlying causes of the 75 percent poverty rate. Real progress requires a pragmatic approach to restoring the central bank’s functionality, stabilizing the Afghani currency, and facilitating a level of technical engagement that allows for the maintenance of critical infrastructure.

Ultimately, the stabilization of Afghanistan is not merely a humanitarian imperative but a regional security necessity. An economy that leaves three out of four people in a state of absolute deprivation is a breeding ground for displacement, illicit trade, and radicalization. If the goal is to prevent a total societal collapse, the international community must find a path toward “economic pragmatism”—a framework that allows for the flow of commercial capital and the restoration of basic services while navigating the existing political constraints. Without such a shift, the current state of deprivation will become the permanent baseline for a nation on the brink, with devastating consequences for the region and the world at large.

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