lol, i didnt send that here!

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Dan Nave 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Thursday, February 21, 2008 12:44 PM
  Subject: RE: CS>Thriving Afghan opium crop hampers development-IMF


  The only real solution to the drug problem is drug decriminalization and a 
certain amount of regulation.  

  A majority of the problems we face with the drug problem is due to the laws, 
not due to the drugs.  Yes, some people will take drugs if they are 
decriminalized, but they do so now anyway.

  I can't see any real downside to it.

  Dan



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    From: Vigilius Haufniensis [mailto:[email protected]] 
    Sent: Thursday, February 21, 2008 2:21 PM
    To: [email protected]; [email protected]
    Subject: CS>Thriving Afghan opium crop hampers development-IMF


    
http://www.precisenews.us/news.html?articleId=13167381&buyerId=preciseNews&channelId=914&title=Thriving%20Afghan%20opium%20crop%20hampers%20development-IMF&tags=thriving%20afghan%20opium%20crop%20development
    Thriving Afghan opium crop hampers development-IMF


    Lesley Wroughton
    Reuters North American News Service

    Feb 20, 2008 13:50 EST

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A thriving Afghan opium crop earned farmers about $1 
billion in 2007 and together with a resurgence in violence was hampering 
economic development, the International Monetary Fund said Wednesday.

    In an annual economic review of the Afghan economy, the IMF said opium 
production in Afghanistan had spiraled to 8,200 tonnes in 2007 from 185 tonnes 
in 2001 and was by far the largest cash crop in the country.

    "The volatile security situation and the persistence of the drug economy 
are weakening attempts at broadening economic development," the IMF said.

    "The drug economy, while being a source of livelihood for many households, 
continues to be a major obstacle for Afghanistan to regain its comparative 
advantage in traditional exports," it added.

    It said Afghanistan's share of world opium supply increased to about 93 
percent in 2007 from 52 percent in 1995, making it the world's largest opium 
producer despite efforts since the fall of the Taliban six years ago to bring 
production under control.

    Despite the presence of more than 50,000 foreign troops led by NATO and the 
U.S. military, as well as some 140,000 Afghan troops, militants have made a 
comeback in the past two years, and more than 11,000 people have been killed in 
violence.

    As part of their campaign to drive out foreign troops and topple 
Afghanistan's government, the al Qaeda-backed Taliban largely rely on suicide 
raids and roadside bomb attacks.

    The IMF said it was not qualified to comment on Afghanistan's opium 
production, and cited figures from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime 
that estimate the total value of the opium harvest in Afghanistan was worth 
about $4 billion in 2007, compared with $2.7 billion in 2005.

    "Given the size of the opium economy, clearly a good part of it is injected 
through either consumption or higher savings in the economy," Mohamad Elhage, 
IMF mission chief for Afghanistan, told a conference call with reporters.

    While opium production has flourished in the south and west of the country, 
Elhage said a worsening security situation was having a broader impact on the 
overall economy.

    "We have seen a reduction to some extent in foreign direct investment and 
implications on the budget because more spending will be allocated to security 
either through the central government budget or through the external budget, 
which is funded by donors," Elhage said.

    "So clearly the security situation is not helping in terms of achieving 
fiscal sustainability in the period ahead and also it is having an impact on 
the investment climate," he added.

    Still, Elhage praised the Afghan government for a strong performance under 
a three-year IMF-supported economic program.

    "Despite the weakening security situation, if we look at the macro level 
the economy continues to perform well," he said.

    Economic growth in Afghanistan is expected to exceed 13 percent in fiscal 
2007/08, rebounding from 6.1 percent in 2006/07 when the economy was hit by a 
drought.

    Elhage said revenue performance had doubled as a percentage of gross 
domestic product and strengthened the fiscal situation, while private banking 
was expanding.

    "So progress at macro-level continues to be made, however, clearly the 
security situation is going to have an impact," he said, adding: "When you have 
a weakening security situation it will impact the investment climate and 
willingness by investors to take more risk in the country." (Editing by Chizu 
Nomiyama)

    Source: Reuters North American News Service 



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