The Economist - UK (2022-02-19)

(Antfer) #1

50 Asia TheEconomistFebruary19th 2022


manitarian catastrophe. Aid agencies
warn,loudlyandrepeatedly,ofunimagin­
ablemisery.Almosttheentirepopulation
couldbelivinginabjectpoverty—under
$1.90 aday—by themiddle oftheyear.
Some60%ofthecountryisatriskofacute
hunger.Alreadysomefamilieshavebeen
reducedtoeatingdryflour.Peoplearesell­
ingbodypartsandchildren.
Therestoftheworldhasnotignored
thecrisis.Donorscommitted$1.8bninhu­
manitarianassistancein 2021. Lastmonth
theunlauncheditslargest­everappealfor
a singlecountry,hopingtoraiseanother
$4.4bn.Getting donorstostump upthe
cashisnottheproblem.Thedifficultyis
gettingthemoneyintothecountry,asMs
Aken’sexampleillustrates.
Americaandtheunhaveclarifiedthat
sanctions don’t apply to humanitarian
work.Butrisk­averse banks remain un­
willingtotransferfundsintoAfghanistan.
Some85%ofngos saywithdrawallimits
andtheinabilitytotransfermoneyarese­
riouslyhamperingtheirwork,accordingto
a recentsurveybytheNorwegianRefugee
Council,anotherbigngo(seechartonpre­
viouspage).Thecouncilitselfhasresorted
tobuyingbasicitems,includingblankets
andfood,inPakistanandbringingthem
overtheborderbyroad.Eventheunis
struggling.Ithastakentostuffingbank
notesinplanesandflyingthemin. Thatis
expensive, and moving so much cash
aroundthecountryisrisky.
On February11th PresidentJoe Biden
crushedhopesofa recovery.Ofthe$9bn­
oddofAfghanistan’scentral­bankreserves
heldabroad,$7bnisinAmerica(therestis
mostlyinEurope).TheWhiteHousesaidit
wouldunfreezethatmoney,usinghalfofit
foraid and settingaside theother half
pendingjudgmentincasesinvolvingthe
familiesofvictimsoftheSeptember11that­
tacks,whoaresuingforcompensation.
Thedecisionhaselicitedcriticismfrom
allcornersofAfghansociety.TheTaliban
governmenthasdarklythreatenedto“re­
consideritspolicy”towardsAmericaifthe
executiveorderisnotrescinded.Ordinary

Afghanshavetakentothestreets,making
thereasonablepointthattheAfghanpeo­
plehadnothingtodowiththe9/11attack­
ers,mostofwhomwereSaudi(although
theterroristgroupbehindtheattackswas
shelteredbytheTalibanlasttimetheywere
inpower).ShahMehrabi,a memberofthe
Afghancentralbank’sboard,describesthe
moveasflagrantlyunjust.GraemeSmithof
the International Crisis Group, athink­
tank, saysthedecisionisakintoKingSolo­
monliterallycuttingthebabyinhalf.
Whatever the Biden administration
doeswiththemoney—apartfromkeeping
itfrozenorreturningittoAfghanistan—it
isineffectseizingAfghanistan’scentral­
bankassets.Withoutfundstobackitscur­

rencyorrepaycommercialdepositorsof
dollars,thebankandthebankingsystem
willlosewhatshredsofcredibilitywere
left.That couldcausethesortofhyper­
inflationGermanysawinthe1920s and
Zimbabwein2008­09,fearsKhalidPayen­
da,Afghanistan’s financeminister until
August.Inflationissoaring(seechart).
Thatwillonlyexacerbatethecountry’s
alreadygrimsituation.Humanitarianas­
sistanceisanexpensivewaytosavepeople
from indigence and, in any case, no
amountofaidcanreplaceafunctioning
economy.Atsomepointglobalinterestin
Afghanistan will fade.“These aidlevels
aren’tgoingtostaysohighforever,”says
MsAken.Whatthen?n

Scaling new peaks
Afghanistan, consumer prices
% change on a year earlier

Source: World Bank

2

15

10

5

0

-5
2020 2021

T


he eyeswaterasyourcorrespondent
enters Sakimoto Distillery. Large vats
of rice bubble over open flames, filling
the air with boozy fumes. The solution
will be distilled into awamori, a liquor
native to the islands of Okinawa, the
most southern and western of Japan’s
prefectures. Sakimoto Toshio, the dis­
tillery’s boss, pours out a sample of the
stuff, which with an alcohol content of
60% is about half as strong again as a
typical spirit. Your correspondent’s
throat burns as it goes down. 
Awamoriwas invented in Okinawa in
the 15th century. It uses long­grain rice
and, to stimulate fermentation, black koji
mould, distinguishing it from shochu, a
better­known Japanese spirit invented in
nearby Kyushu, which uses white koji
and short­grain rice or other starches.
The punch it packs reflects local condi­
tions: its strength helped preserve the
drink on the hot, humid islands in the
days before refrigeration. The throat­
burning 60% variant emerged on Yona­
guni, Japan’s westernmost island, where
Sakimoto is based. Known as hanasake, it
is said to have started life as a disin­
fectant for medical use on ships, and
later came to play a role in rituals such as
funerals. When locals actually drink it,
they usually cut it with ice and water and
have it with roast pork. 
Awamorihas lately fallen on hard
times. Two­thirds of the 45 members of
Okinawa Awamori Distillers Associa­
tion were in the red in 2020. Production
volumes that year dipped by nearly 20%,
the fourth straight year of decline. Youn­
ger Japanese are drinking less booze, and
they prefer softer stuff or mixed drinks.
That has forced the industry to ex­

periment.Japan’sexternaltrade organi­
sation has sought to market shochu and
awamori as premium drinks for dis­
cerning foreign tipplers, but few are
biting (or sipping). Distillers have re­
leased flavoured awamoridrinks, organ­
ised awamorifestivals and enlisted influ­
encers to appeal to younger consumers—
with mixed results. Nakamura Shunki, a
researcher at Okinawa’s manufacturing
promotion office, reckons it helps if the
drink looks Instagrammable. 
Mr Sakimoto has got the idea. He
launched a collaboration with Rebun,
Japan’s northernmost island, which
supplies mineral water to make a “lim­
ited edition” awamori. The “preffect” of
bringing together Japan’s extreme north
and west has helped sales, he says. Wise­
ly, he also watered it down: its alcohol
content is a more palatable 43%.

Japanesebooze

Awamori? Go on then


YONAGUNI
Okinawa’s distillers are trying to posh up the local firewater

Goes straight to the head
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