cover image: Afghanistan’s New Economic Landscape: Using Nighttime Lights to Understand the Civilian Economy after 2021

Afghanistan’s New Economic Landscape: Using Nighttime Lights to Understand the Civilian Economy after 2021

18 Nov 2024

This study uses nighttime lights to examine the evolution of economic activity in Afghanistan after the August 2021 regime change. A year later, nighttime luminosity had dropped by 20 percent, with two-thirds of this decline tied to the pre-planned international military withdrawal. To focus on local economic activity, the study filters out light emissions from foreign military installations, which accounted for up to 30 percent of lights over the past decade. Using civilian nighttime lights to understand the new economic reality in the country indicates a significant economic recovery concentrated in previously conflict-affected regions. By 2023/24, civilian luminosity had surpassed pre-2020/21 levels by 10.5 percent while, in contrast, official gross domestic product indicates an economy that is one-quarter smaller. The findings highlight changes in economic dynamics, including increased informality, shifts in the geographic distribution of activity, and improved security post-Taliban takeover.
afghanistan gross domestic product urban development nighttime lights data scarcity synthetic control macroeconomics and economic growth::economic growth poverty reduction::inequality industry::industrial and market data and reporting

Authors

Barriga Cabanillas, Oscar, Kosmidou-Bradley, Walker, Redaelli, Silvia, Tateishi, Eigo, Teruggi, Ivo

Citation
“ Barriga Cabanillas, Oscar ; Kosmidou-Bradley, Walker ; Redaelli, Silvia ; Tateishi, Eigo ; Teruggi, Ivo . 2024 . Afghanistan’s New Economic Landscape: Using Nighttime Lights to Understand the Civilian Economy after 2021 . Policy Research Working Paper; 10969 . © Washington, DC: World Bank . http://hdl.handle.net/10986/42430 License: CC BY 3.0 IGO . ”
Collection(s)
Policy Research Working Papers
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/1813-9450-10969
Identifier externaldocumentum
34418579
Identifier internaldocumentum
34418579
Pages
38
Published in
United States of America
Region country
Afghanistan
RelationisPartofseries
Policy Research Working Paper; 10969
Report
WPS10969
Rights
CC BY 3.0 IGO
Rights Holder
World Bank
Rights URI
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/
UNIT
EFI-SAR-POV-Poverty and Equity (ESAPV)
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/42430
date disclosure
2024-11-18
region administrative
South Asia

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