Afghanistan's 'surplus' rural population

This briefing considers what the lack of agricultural growth means for rural households

Abstract

Since 2002, Afghanistan’s government and the international community have put agriculture at the centre of efforts to rebuild Afghanistan’s economy, based on a shared vision of agriculture as the engine of growth that would promote economic development, provide employment and reduce poverty. However, agricultural growth has not taken place, and rural poverty rates have not declined.

This briefing is based on 3 rounds of a panel survey conducted from 2002 to 2016 in rural Afghanistan, and considers what the lack of agricultural growth means for rural households.

The main findings include:

  • The scale and significance of landlessness has been underestimated
  • The direction of rural livelihood trajectories vary, but for many the long term future is grim
  • Social relationships, not market relations, characterise the nature of economic behaviour
  • Afghanistan may be suffering not from late development - but from being ‘too late.’

This research was funded under the Secure Livelihoods Research Consortium (SLRC) programme

Citation

Pain, A., and Huot, D., 2017. Afghanistan’s ‘surplus’ rural population, Briefing Paper, London: Secure Livelihoods Research Consortium, 4p

Afghanistan’s ‘surplus’ rural population

Updates to this page

Published 22 February 2017