By Daud Khattak and RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi
July 16, 2026
Momin Khan works long hours running a small shop in the Afghan capital, Kabul. He’s fortunate to have work, but like many of those around him who don’t have a job, he finds himself in the same position as them: relying on remittances from family abroad to survive.
Since the Taliban regained control of Afghanistan five years ago as international military forces withdrew, the country’s economy has sputtered, inflation has spiked to erode purchasing power, and international investment has all but dried up, leaving ordinary Afghans like Khan scrambling.
Khan told RFE/RL’s Radio Azadi that each month, expat members of Afghan families send money back home from around the world, providing a lifeline amid troubled economic times.
“Those [families] depend entirely on the money that is sent to them [from abroad]. So, almost every month, I collect the money for them and deliver it. It has turned into a main source of survival for those families,” he said.
Since retaking power in August 2021, the Taliban-controlled government has tried to play up economic successes after rolling out a five-year National Development Strategy last year.
But few Afghans are feeling a positive impact. In fact, many are feeling the opposite in one of the world’s poorest countries, which has been wracked by decades of war.
The annual inflation rate in May hit 8 percent, compared with 0.5 percent in the same month a year earlier. Food inflation, which measures price growth across a basket of food items, was even higher at 8.2 percent.
When Radio Azadi spoke to families in different provinces around the country, the same problems — inflation and a lack of employment opportunities — were brought up.
Abdul Sattar Ayubi, a resident of Sawkay district in Afghanistan’s eastern Kunar Province, told Radio Azadi that had it not been for his son sending money, his family would have been left with no other source of income.
“My son is based in London and supports the family by regularly sending money from there. We wouldn’t be able to fulfill our daily expenses without his support,” said Ayubi, adding that “with no jobs or business opportunities in the country,” Afghans who have relatives or family members abroad basically have to receive financial support to survive.
There is no official figure indicating the exact number of foreign remittances to Afghanistan in 2026, mainly because most of the money inflows come via channels such as Hawala, an informal system of lenders that operates outside the traditional banking system.
Azarakhsh Hafizi, former head of Afghanistan’s Chamber of Commerce, told Radio Azadi that foreign remittances have effectively tripled in recent years.
“In the past, Afghans living abroad used to send around $1 billion a year. That amount now stands between $2.7 billion and $3.5 billion annually,” said Hafizi, who returned to Kabul after staying in Germany for many years.
Afghanistan has also become one of the world’s largest humanitarian crises following economic collapse and the loss of vital Western aid.
Taliban restrictions on women have compounded the hardship by cutting off a crucial source of household income for many families already struggling to survive. Women have been barred from working in much of the economy, while women-owned businesses face extensive restrictions.
Putting further strain on the economy, almost 3.5 million Afghans, mostly from neighboring Iran and Pakistan, have been forced to return to the country in recent years.
“With millions of Afghans returning home, rapid population growth is outpacing economic gains pushing down incomes and deepening poverty and fragility”, said Faris Hadad-Zervos, World Bank country director for Afghanistan.
Afghanistan also has one of the highest unemployment rates in the world. According to the International Labor Organization (ILO), the unemployment rate remained at 13.35 percent in 2025.
One resident of the southern province of Kandahar told Radio Azadi that financial support from her relatives abroad is the only source of income that enables her family to buy vital food and medicines.
“Unemployment and economic hardship have forced many Afghan households to rely on this assistance to cover our daily expenses, such as buying medicine and food as well as meeting our children’s needs,” said the woman, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Hafizi warned that a reliance on remittances is only a short-term solution to Afghanistan’s problems, and could eventually have a negative effect on people’s motivation to work and on entrepreneurship.
“To help overcome the economic problems, the focus must shift to long term solutions that will help generate employment opportunities and improve the economy,” he said.

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The Guardian (UK): Child marriage is not new to south Asia. But while the practice across the region has been declining, the Taliban takeover reversed that trend in Afghanistan. Shabnam*, a midwife, says: “Since the new government came to power, the number of child mothers has increased dramatically. In the past, perhaps only two child mothers visited the hospital each month, most of whom were from illiterate families. But now, literate and illiterate families marry off their daughters at a young age.” 
Afghanistan International: The World Health Organization has confirmed four new polio cases in three Afghan provinces over the past week, bringing the country’s total since the start of 2026 to 11. The United Nations said two of the new cases were detected in Nangarhar province, one in Helmand and another in Herat. The report also shows that Pakistan has recorded fewer polio cases than Afghanistan this year.
Amu: The Amo Sharks won their third consecutive Shpageeza Cricket League title on Wednesday, defeating the Speenghar Tigers by seven wickets in the final with a commanding all-round performance. The victory completed a hat trick of Shpageeza Cricket League championships for the Amo Sharks, cementing their status as the dominant team in Afghanistan’s premier domestic Twenty20 competition.
Khaama: Britain’s public inquiry into alleged war crimes by the Special Air Service (SAS) has heard evidence that Afghan detainees were allegedly thrown from raised forklifts “for fun,” as investigators continue examining claims of unlawful killings and abuse by British special forces during the Afghanistan conflict. Previous hearings have heard allegations that some SAS personnel maintained unofficial “kill lists” and carried out night raids in which unarmed Afghan civilians were allegedly executed, including individuals reportedly shot while inside their homes. The inquiry has also examined claims that operational reports were altered to justify fatal shootings.
Afghanistan International: Human Rights Watch has called for transparency and accountability over the death of Afghan asylum seeker Mohammad Nazeer Paktiawal in US immigration detention, urging authorities to release his full autopsy report. Alyssa Kellman of Human Rights Watch said the death of Paktiawal highlighted the need for transparency and accountability in US immigration detention facilities. Paktiawal, a 41-year-old Afghan asylum seeker who served alongside US forces in Afghanistan for about a decade, died on March 14, less than 24 hours after being detained in Texas. US authorities said he died following what they described as an allergic reaction.