The Role of Narcotics (Opium) in the Local Economy of Afghanistan <Research Note>

国際協力研究誌 Volume 18 Issue 1 Page 153-166 published_at 2011-12-01
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Title ( eng )
The Role of Narcotics (Opium) in the Local Economy of Afghanistan <Research Note>
Creator
Sajjad Ahmed
Source Title
国際協力研究誌
Journal of International Development and Cooperation
Volume 18
Issue 1
Start Page 153
End Page 166
Abstract
This study illustrates the role of narcotics (opium) in the local economy of Afghanistan, a landlocked country, stricken by decades of conflict, and prolonged periods of drought. However, poppy (opium) cultivation is a major strategy for as much as 10% of the rural population. Thus, Afghanistan has re-emerged as one of the largest poppy (opium 90%) producers in the world following the fall of the Taliban in 2001. In 2004, the narcotics economy equaled more than half of Afghanistan's Gross Domestic Product (GDP). The wealth from the narcotics economy, however, is shared among only a small number of people, and the trade is protected by armed groups and tied to powerful international drug traffickers' networks. The narcotics economy supports warlords and their militias, as well as fuelling corruption among Afghan government and security officials, and it therefore poses a real threat to the ongoing state-building process and sustainable peace in the country.
NDC
Economics [ 330 ]
Language
eng
Resource Type departmental bulletin paper
Publisher
広島大学大学院国際協力研究科
Date of Issued 2011-12-01
Publish Type Version of Record
Access Rights open access
Source Identifier
[ISSN] 1341-0903
[NCID] AN10482914