KABUL— The International Rescue Committee (IRC) issued a stark warning this week, stating that Afghanistan stands to lose up to 10% of its entire economic output as critical international aid and climate financing dry up simultaneously. This precipitous drop threatens to unravel fragile humanitarian gains and plunge the nation deeper into a cycle of economic collapse and climate-driven disaster.
According to a report released Wednesday, global climate assistance to Afghanistan has already fallen by nearly 40% this year. This decline is part of a broader trend where international funds are increasingly being directed toward middle-income countries with more stable governance, leaving crisis-stricken and vulnerable nations like Afghanistan critically underfunded.
A Perfect Storm of Crises
The funding crisis hits a country already on its knees. Afghanistan is one of the world’s top ten nations most vulnerable to climate change, despite contributing minimally to global emissions. The country is caught in a vicious cycle:
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Severe Drought: Following decades of conflict, a severe drought—now in its third year—has decimated agriculture, the primary livelihood for most Afghans. Crops have failed, and livestock have perished, pushing rural communities to the brink of famine.
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Economic Collapse: Since the Taliban takeover in 2021, the formal economy has contracted by up to 30%. The freezing of foreign assets and the halt of development aid have crippled public services and collapsed the banking system.
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Humanitarian Access: Restrictions on women aid workers, imposed by the de facto authorities, have severely hampered the delivery of life-saving assistance, making it exponentially harder for organizations to reach those most in need.
“This isn’t just a funding gap; it’s a market failure in global solidarity,” said an anonymous senior humanitarian official familiar with the region. “We are watching a slow-motion catastrophe unfold. When you remove the last remaining lifeline—humanitarian aid—from a population already battered by climate shocks and economic isolation, the consequences will be measured in lives lost.”
IRC’s Response and a Call to Action
In response to the escalating crisis, the IRC has scaled up its direct assistance, providing emergency cash grants to more than 28,000 families across the country. This direct injection of funds allows families to purchase food, medicine, and other essentials, providing a temporary buffer against total destitution.
However, the organization emphasizes that stop-gap measures are insufficient. Ahead of the upcoming Berlin Climate Security Conference, the IRC is urging world leaders and global donors to fundamentally rethink their approach. They are calling for:
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Prioritizing At-Risk Nations: Climate adaptation funding must be directed to the most vulnerable countries, like Afghanistan, where the impacts of climate change are already causing mass suffering.
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Sustained and Flexible Funding: Donors must move beyond short-term emergency funding to multi-year commitments that allow for longer-term planning and resilience-building, such as drought-resistant agriculture and water management systems.
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Finding Solutions for Access: The international community and de facto authorities must find a way to ensure unimpeded humanitarian access, including for female aid workers, to reach all affected populations.
A Fragile System on the Brink
Experts warn that the collapse of health, food, and livelihood systems is already underway. Without a renewed and sustained international response, the situation will deteriorate rapidly.
“A 10% GDP loss in a country as impoverished as Afghanistan is not an economic statistic; it is a death sentence for thousands,” said Dr. Aanya Sharma, a development economist focusing on fragile states. “The health system is hanging by a thread, malnutrition rates among children are at catastrophic levels, and without immediate intervention, we risk seeing a complete systemic failure. The world must not look away.”
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