The socio-economic impact of the Taliban's poppy ban
This K4DD Rapid Evidence Review explores the socio-economic impact of the Taliban’s poppy ban, and explores how affected households have responded to the ban.
The Taliban’s edict prohibiting poppy cultivation and the use and trade of all types of narcotics across Afghanistan has had a profound impact on the country’s rural population, particularly in regions that saw the highest volumes of poppy cultivation. The disruption to farmers’ livelihoods comes amidst a collapsing national economy that promises few viable long-term alternatives.
Poppy has long been Afghanistan’s most valuable cash crop, and saw a significant expansion during the two decades of the Republic that followed the Taliban’s late 2001 ouster. Its labour-intensive cultivation employed several hundred thousand people, pushing up wages and living standards of those directly and indirectly involved. As Afghanistan faced the worst drought in decades around the time of the Taliban’s August 2021 return to power, poppy’s resilience and relatively low water needs made it all-the-more attractive.
Afghanistan’s diplomatic and economic isolation after the Taliban’s August 2021 forceful seizure of power has devastated an already struggling economy. The freezing of around US$9 billion in central bank foreign reserves, held mostly in the U.S., triggered a collapse of the local currency and a major liquidity crisis, while aid cut-offs and sanctions triggered hyper-inflation and impeded trade and other business. Without tangible Taliban commitments to basic rights and equality, especially of girls and women, any deep international economic engagement remains highly unlikely. A brutal economic crisis will only magnify the poppy ban’s impact on households.