Title: Mark McKenna
1Afghanistan at the CrossroadsIs There a Role
for Business?
- Mark McKenna
- Consultant, Institutional Development and
Conflict Management
2My Background
- 25 years supporting local initiatives to promote
governance and political reform in Asia - 14 years living and working in South and West
Asia - 10 months over the past 2 years spent working in
Afghanistan
3Afghanistan at the Crossroads
- Afghanistan sits astride the ancient Silk Road
from China and East Asia to the Middle East and
Europe - Afghanistan borders Iran, Pakistan, China and the
Central Asian states of Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan
and Tajikistan
4Afghanistan in History
- Farthest extent of Alexander the Greats empire
in 3rd century BCE - Incorporated into the Mughal empire in 8th
century CE - Contested over by the British and Russian empires
in the 18th and 19th centuries - Established as an independent state in 1919
- Modern history
- Democratic opening, 1973-1978
- Period of Soviet occupation, 1979-1989
- Rivalry among contesting ethnic groups, 1990s
- Removal of the Taliban, 2001
- New Constitution adopted, 2004
5Afghanistan Today People
- Population, about 31.9 million (July 2007 est.)
- Total fertility rate 6.6 children
- Population growth rate 2.6 per year
- Median age 17.6 years
- Life expectancy at birth 43.8 years
- Literacy rate 28 (43 male 13 female, 2000
est.) - Population living below the poverty line 53
6Afghanistan Today People
- Ethnic groups
- Pashtun - 42
- Tajik - 27
- Hazara - 9 and Uzbek - 9
- Aimak - 4, Turkmen - 3, Baloch - 2, and other
- 4 - Primary linguistic groups (many are multilingual)
- Dari - 50
- Pashtu - 35,
- Turkic languages (Uzbek and Turkmen) - 11
- 30 minor languages (mainly Balochi and Pashai) -
4 - Religious groups
- Sunni Muslim - 80
- Shi'a Muslim - 19
- Other - 1
7Afghanistan Today People
8Afghanistan Today People
9Afghanistan Today Culture
- The family is the most important reference point
in Afghan culture - Joint family system
- Gender roles defined by tradition and religious
beliefs - Honor and shame are key values that shape
individual and group behavior - Honor defines the worth of the individual
- The male family head responsible for protecting
the familys honor - Dishonor brings shame honor must be restored
- Hospitality is an important virtue in Afghan
culture - A host is bound to protect the honor of a guest
10Afghanistan Today Land
- About the size of Texas
- landlocked no significant bodies of water
- arid to semiarid cold winters and hot summers
- mostly rugged mountains plains in north and
southwest - Natural resources include,
- natural gas, petroleum, coal, copper, iron ore,
zinc and other minerals, and precious and
semiprecious stones - estimates made in the 1970s indicated as much as
5 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, 95 million
barrels of oil and condensate reserves, and 400
million tons of coal - Environmental constraints/concerns,
- limited natural fresh water and potable water
- soil degradation overgrazing deforestation
desertification - air and water pollution
11Afghanistan Today Government
- New constitution, adopted January 16, 2004
- Establishes the form of government
- Includes a bill of rights
- Mixed presidential system
- President and two vice-presidents elected by
direct vote for five-year term - Bicameral National Assembly
- House of People (Wolesi Jirga), 249
directly-elected members - House of Elders (Meshrano Jirga), 102
indirectly-elected members - Judicial branch headed by a nine-member Supreme
Court (Stera Mahkrama) appointed for 10 year
terms - Legal system is a mix of civil and Sharia law
12Afghanistan Today Economy
- The economy is primarily agricultural
- 2004 GDP 21.5 billion per capita GDP 800 (2004
est.) - Economy growing at over 12 per year since 2001
- Has received 8 billion in international
assistance since 2001 - 80 of labor force in agriculture
- 40 of the workforce is under- or unemployed
- Primary agricultural products
- Afghanistan is once more the worlds largest
producer of opium, supplying 80-90 of the
European market - Other products wheat, fruits, nuts, wool,
mutton, leather - Primary industrial products
- Small-scale production of textiles, soap,
furniture, shoes, handwoven carpets - Production of fertilizer and cement
- Significant potential for extraction of natural
gas, coal, copper and other minerals
13Afghanistan Today Economy
14Afghanistan Today Economy
15Afghanistan Today Comflict Impact
16Afghanistan Today The Kite Runner
17Afghanistan Today The Kite Runner
18Afghanistan The Business Case
- Doing Business (2008 rankings of 178 countries)
- Starting a business 24
- Employing workers 24
- Paying taxes 38
- Dealing with licenses 141
- Doing business 159
- Enforcing contracts 160
- Registering property 169
- Trading across borders 174
- Getting credit 177
- Protecting investors 178
- Closing a business 178
19Afghanistan Key Market Challenges
- Poor infrastructure, including power, transport
and telecommunications - A weak legal framework and judicial and
regulatory enforcement - High levels of corruption
- Inadequate access to land and to secure land
title - A nascent commercial banking system providing
limited commercial financing - Customs regulations and procedures that are
neither transparent nor uniform - A shortage of skilled labor and trained personnel
both in the government and among the workforce - A critical threat and security situation
20Afghanistan Four Key Sectors
- Transport and logistics
- Opportunity Little competition, consistent
demand, high profits - Challenge Poor road conditions, lack of a
seaport, arbitrary rules and regulations, high
cost - Food and beverage processing
- Opportunity First mover advantages, brand
recognition, proximity to low cost materials and
large markets - Challenge Poor transport, low quality, poor
environmental conditions, need for energy,
technology, financing
21Afghanistan Four Key Sectors
- Carpets and textiles
- Opportunity Traditional expertise, recognized
brand, preferential trade access,
non-perishable product - Challenge High-cost of infrastructure and
transportation, shortage of raw materials, lack
of finishing skills - Extractive industries
- Opportunity Growth potential, high demand, low
cost for locally produced materials, high unmet
need for energy - Challenge Weak legal regime, incomplete
privatization, security concerns in mineral rich
areas, shortage of skilled labor
22Why Invest in Afghanistan?
- Most important from the investors point of view
should not be the current situation but
rather the dynamic movement of the countrys
economic and security realities, and the future
opportunities created for business. - Investment Horizons Afghanistan (World Bank
2005) - Three important reasons to invest in Afghanistan
- The value of being a first mover in a regional
economy - The potential for growth
- CSR The important role of business in promoting
economic opportunity and global security
23Any questions?
- Afghanistan at the CrossroadsIs There a Role
for Business?
Thank you