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Barriers to Central Bank Independence in Afghanistan: Policymakers' Perspectives

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  • Mohammad Ibrahim Akbary
  • Azizullah Farahmand
  • Mohammad Juma Sharifi

Abstract

This qualitative investigation critically examined the multifaceted barriers undermining central bank independence in Afghanistan through comprehensive semi-structured interviews with fifteen pivotal policymakers, banking executives, and academic experts. Employing rigorous thematic analysis, six interrelated dimensions emerged: political and executive interference, deficient legal and institutional frameworks, financial and operational constraints, entrenched cultural and institutional challenges, legitimacy and transparency deficits, and the pervasive influence of external actors. The findings elucidate how persistent political encroachments, ambiguous statutory mandates, fiscal dependency on the government, scarcity of specialized human capital, insufficient societal comprehension, and conditionality’s imposed by international financial institutions collectively compromise the operational autonomy and policy efficacy of Afghanistan’s central bank. This study situates these findings within the broader corpus of central banking literature in developing economies, highlighting the fragility and largely symbolic nature of institutional independence under prevailing contextual complexities. The research underscores the imperative for comprehensive legal reforms, financial autonomy, institutional capacity building, cultural transformation, and strategic engagement with international bodies to actualize a resilient and credible monetary authority. These insights offer substantial theoretical and policy implications for advancing monetary governance and economic stabilization in fragile state contexts.

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Handle: RePEc:khr:wpaper:0042
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File URL: https://krj.khurasan.edu.af/index.php/files/article/view/42/21
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