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060127compact

Course: ECO 343, Fall 2008
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Policy Foreign In Focus | Lessons in Post Conflict Reconstruction from the New Afghanistan Compact PartnersForeign Policy In FocusInstitute for Policy StudiesInternational Relations CenterAbout FPIFAbout FPIFStaffGovernance & FundingAdvisory CommitteeWriter GuidelinesPrivacy PolicySupport FPIFContentby Authorby Titleby Dateby Issue >>Drug ControlEnergyEnvironmentFinancial FlowsFood &...

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Policy Foreign In Focus | Lessons in Post Conflict Reconstruction from the New Afghanistan Compact PartnersForeign Policy In FocusInstitute for Policy StudiesInternational Relations CenterAbout FPIFAbout FPIFStaffGovernance & FundingAdvisory CommitteeWriter GuidelinesPrivacy PolicySupport FPIFContentby Authorby Titleby Dateby Issue >>Drug ControlEnergyEnvironmentFinancial FlowsFood & FarmGlobal GovernanceHealthHuman RightsLaborMilitaryTerrorismTradeU.S. AgenciesWomenby Region >>AfricaAsiaPacificEuropeLatin AmericaCaribbeanRussiaCISMiddle EastIraq In FocusIRC Americas ProgramColombia and Drug WarChinaPublicationsBooksMedia Training CDEzines >>Progressive ResponseFPIFTalking Points ZineGlobalizationPeace & JusticeAfrica NewsMediaPress ReleasesMedia GuideFPIF Op-EdsPress ReleasesFPIF In The News ArchiveSign up for FPIF News ReleasesSubscribeSearchSite Map FPIF Policy Report Lessons in Post Conflict Reconstruction from the New Afghanistan Compact By Peter J. Middlebrook and Sharon M. Miller | January 27, 2006 Editor: John Gershman, IRC Foreign Policy In Focuswww.fpif.org Introduction: The forthcoming London Conference 1 on Afghanistan (January 31-February 1, 2006), to be attended by President Hamid Karzai, British Prime Minister Tony Blair, and UN Secretary General Kofi Annan, will bring together high ranking dignitaries from the government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan and the international development community to endorse a new multilateral agreement to be known as the Afghanistan Compact, the successor of the Bonn Agreement, which had established the process for creating an interim government, crafting a Constitution and holding elections for a president and a national assembly following the ouster of the Taliban in 2001. The compact makes provisions for the attainment of joint government-cooperation partner benchmarks to enhance security, governance, the rule of law, human rights, and economic and social development to further consolidate the ongoing reform and reconstruction agenda. 2 The compact provides the legal framework for continuation of the international assistance mission to Afghanistan for the next five years. In spite of certain shortcomings, the mission (UNAMA and other agencies) have played a vital role in guaranteeing the successful conclusion of political reform benchmarks set by the Bonn Agreement. 3 The compact is unlike its predecessor, however, in that each benchmark is now derived from the elected government's Interim Afghan National Development Strategy (I-ANDS); to be presented at the conference as the cornerstone of government policy. 4 The Afghanistan Compact The preparation of the Afghanistan Compact, which supersedes the Bonn Agreement, initially started as a parallel exercise. However, over time the compact became a fully integrated component of the I-ANDS policy framework matrix. The compact makes provisions for the attainment of joint government-cooperation partner benchmarks to enhance security, governance, the rule of law, human rights, and economic and social development (as well as tackling the drug trade) to further consolidate the ongoing reform and reconstruction agenda. The compact should assist the government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan in establishing a framework for cooperation with the international community designed to address the remaining security, governance, and development challenges facing the Afghan people. The compact will also establish a new mechanism for coordinating Afghan and international efforts, under the leadership of the UN. Furthermore, the Conference will provide an opportunity for the Afghan government to present its Interim National Development Strategy, thereby setting out its sectoral plans and priorities aimed at sustaining high levels of growth in the non-illicit economy and enhancing progress toward their poverty reduction targets. Whilst the attainment of the I-ANDS benchmarks have yet to be fully identified, the government has already reaffirmed that $4 billion in external funding for reconstruction continues to be required over the five years for (i) legal economic growth to begin to displace the illicit opium economy; (ii) for governance structures to be reformed; and (iii) for basic services to be provided and poverty goals to be met. As over 90% of all reconstruction finance is provided by cooperation partners, with 75% being channeled outside of national accounts, enhancing the effective utilization of aid has become a top priority for Karzai's administration. The partnership between government and donors will require substantial changes in the way external aid is managed, in line with the recommendations of the Paris Declaration. 5 Accordingly, under the I-ANDS, government aims to introduce new strategies to: (i) enhance government ownership; (ii) support effective public expenditure management systems; (iii) focus increasingly on expenditure outcomes and service delivery; (iv) enhance harmonization between government and donor policies; and (v) share mutual accountability between government and donors. Reconstruction Challenges The challenges facing Afghanistan remain immense; and are further complicated by congenital insecurity within Afghanistan's immediate neighborhood, as well as the continued prevalence of a large illicit economy. Many of the emerging constraints are perhaps best described as idiosyncratic (unique and contextualized), where as others are more generic; conforming closely to what has been seen in Kosovo, East Timor, Rwanda, and Iraq, among other cases of post-conflict reconstruction. Idiosyncratic Issues: The failure of successive governments in securing peace and stability forced much of Afghanistan to adopt the law of necessity, not the law of the state. As a consequence, Afghanistan needs to establish an appropriate incentive framework that reaffirms citizen's belief in the national state and the long-term benefits of adopting a formal and fully legal economy. Reforms to the justice sectorclearly lagging behindremain a pre-condition to such a transformation. Insecurity continues to constrain the growth of the legal private sector, the opium economy continues to flourish (constituted 37% of legal GDP in 2005), and the costs of financing the security sector remain beyond the fiscal capacity of government for many years to come. The trade deficit is in the order of U.S. $3 billion, and options for increasing legal exports are limited, as are options for substituting imports for domestic production. The public sector too, in spite of considerable efforts to reform its core functions, remains largely incapacitated outside of Kabul. Poverty rates remains unacceptably high, increasing the tendency to depend on higher-value illegal activities, and maternal mortality rates are the worst reported globally. Domestic revenues lag behind expenditures by a factor of ten to one. Public sector pay levels remain so low, that given the current inflated costs of living, corruption could emerge as public enemy number one; undermining government's efforts to enhance aid flows through national accounts. To counter this, government has established an anti-corruption strategy, as a key cross-cutting theme of the new national strategy. Increased revenue mobilization must occur to allow government to cover the core costs of funding essential state apparatus, wages, and basic servicesparticularly the high costs of maintaining national security. External aid too must enhance alignment between donor priorities and priorities stated in the government's national development strategywith resources ideally being channeled through government accounts so as to strengthen Afghan sovereign capacities. Importantly, with the election of the new national assemblygreater support to build governance capacities outside of Kabul must also remain a primary focus for strengthening provincial relations with the centerwhich in the process strengthens the authority of the center itself. Furthermore, and as if this were not enough, the eradication of opium production will tear a considerable whole in the pockets of many poor farmersas well as contracting the economy. Given that the government's new strategy is growth-oriented, the whole economy must therefore rapidly diversify production away from opiumtoward high-value crops with export potentialitself no mean task. Moreover, despite recent bilateral talks with Pakistanthe much touted Turkmenistan Afghanistan Pipeline (TAP) remains little more than a pipe dream in the eyes of its financiersunfortunately the potential revenue gains to government therefore also remain illusive. The political benchmarks of the Bonn Agreement were poorly sequenced with the rest of the reconstruction and development program. The key institutions of a plural, democratic, liberal, meritocratic state were quickly established (national assembly, civil service commission, justice commission, human rights commission, etc.) as were investment in support of political normalization (elections, demobilization, and disarmamentalthough illegal armed groups still persistand security sector reforms). However, the functionality of the state, particularly with regard to service delivery, will take many years to develop, partially because key investments in subnational administration (excluding provincial security) have yet to be undertaken. Reform of the central Ministry of Interior has been heavily contested. With all subnational administration (provincial governors offices, district administration, and municipalities) classified as units of the central ministry, reforms have been heavily delayed. The election of a national assembly and provincial councils, however, serves to highlight that greater support for subnational administration should have been provided in sequence with the political reform programback in 2004. Yet, in spite of various investments (the Afghanistan Stabilization Program) it is only with the new compact that serious efforts are now to be undertaken. Generic Issues: Over the past 30 years, innumerable evaluations have been conducted reviewing post-conflict reconstruction activitiesof varying depth and breadth of analysisand most with a particular institutional or bilateral bias. However, with complex emergencies tending to evolve into complex reconstruction programs, evaluation exercises must increasingly look to embrace political (political defragmentation/reconciliation, domestic and foreign policy alignments, securitynational and internationaland justice), state-building (reconstructing core revenue and expenditure state institutions required for a functional democratic and accountable modern state, with separation of powers) and development (service delivery, macroeconomic stability, economic growth/diversification, governance of development) spheres. In most cases, evaluation exercises have not taken a recipient government perspective with regard to assessing shortcomings and recommendations tend to be overly aid system centric. The failure to listen to an incumbent government's frustrating experience in dealing with an often deeply-divided international community and a multiplicity of different agency proceduresremains a systemic and enduring failure of external aid. In the Afghan context, although many of the constraints to reconstruction may not be new, they do represent a government perspective on what needs to be done to make aid more effective, as follows: Ensuring the primacy of the national strategy; Strengthening the national budget framework; Strengthening the medium-term fiscal and expenditure programs; Aligning donor and national priorities; Eliminating duplication and the development of parallel delivery systems; Moving toward sector-wide approaches thereby limiting budget projectization; Enhancing cost effectiveness; Simplifying donor procedures; Supporting the Afghan private sector; Developing performance standards; Limiting use of donor top-ups, which risk long-term service delivery; Supporting anti-corruption and greater fiduciary management; Strengthening capacity building; and, Improving coordination of technical assistance. Reconstruction needs assessments following conflict almost always underestimate the levels of external assistance required to reconstruct the core functions of state (governance, management, security, political, service delivery, monitoring, etc.) and to allow the government to move from conflictthrough reconciliationto delivering basic public goods that support economic growth and human development. In nearly all cases, the post-conflict reconciliation and reform program takes nearly a full decade, although needs assessment overly optimistically forecasts all costs against development outcomes over the first 2-4 years. The Afghanistan preliminary needs assessment (January 2002) originally forecast $15 billion in external (non coalition security) reconstruction needs. In March 2004, the government and international community revised this figure to just short of $28 billion on a 7-year commitment and 12-year expenditure program. 6 More often than not, post-conflict governments are chronically incapacitated with weak human resources, and making effective use of external assistance is therefore undermined from the moment external assistance flows into the country. In the absence of strong national governance systems (in particular budgetary and public finance management), combined with the political desire to rapidly deliver tangible public goods, external assistance circumvents national budgetary systems thereby creating parallel structures that soak up external assistance. The parallel aid structures created act as magnets drawing any residual human capacity that existed from the state to the aid community, leading to the creation of a de facto second civil service. Given the frequently excessive focus on delivery of humanitarian assistance, core policy and institutional reforms are more often than not neglected, undermining the pace of much-needed institutional strengthening. In most cases, reconstruction needs are predominantly translated by humanitarian agencies into humanitarian assistance and not assistance for state building per se, bypassing the emergent state in delivery, and undermining its visibility and efficacy to an overly expectant population. Donors reinforce this bias as emergency budget lines operated through expedited financing procedures tend to exclude funding of long-term structural reforms (due to lack of fungibility)despite the urgent need to embark on long-term development from a very early stage. Logically, external investments only translate into durable public goods once the form and functionality of the new state are enhanced or reconfigured sufficiently to deliver basic services, whilst enabling the private sector as the engine of growth and employment. Thereafter, aid (external revenue for government) translates into increasingly worthwhile expenditure outcomes. However, in most cases (as evidenced by both Kosovo and Iraq) administrative reforms are not premised on a review of the new functional assignments with regard to service delivery, and the reform of institutions tends to be blueprint rather than contextual to their end function. The problem is compounded further as following the immediate aftermath of conflict when external assistance is at its peak, combined with political pressure on aid managers to spend, spend, spend, projects are essentially short-term and unsustainable. Ironically, once state institutions are sufficiently endowed to channel what are wrongly perceived as continuing high levels of aid assistance, external support declines, often leaving behind a highly cost-inefficient state apparatus that absorbs the majority of national revenues just to fund basic operational costs. In many cases, the withdrawal of external assistance leads to contraction of the economy, reduces funding of aid agencies, and aid employees (many of whom were former government employees) leave to take up equally well-paid employment beyond the fiscal ability of state to afford. Following conflict, the immediate boon in aid resources and the absence of a strong national budget to support allocation addressing priority needs, leads to the excessive projectization of aid resources. Many of these projects are focused on what might best be seen as nonessential investments given the highly insecure and weak governance climate that exists. With an ever-increasing number of projects, coordination and monitoring (aid and expenditure tracking) becomes a nightmare with government uncertain whether to monitor pledges, commitments, disbursements, actual expenditures, or expenditure outcomes. In many cases, trust funds play a vital role in consolidating donor finances, although a residual number of donors favor more traditional expenditure channels through their own agencies and national private sector. In many cases, particularly where a large foreign bilateral has adopted a particular mandate in the post-conflict state (i.e. in Afghanistan and Iraq), a preoccupation with particular national interests (i.e. terrorism) skews support away from core reforms to areas often of marginal returns for the state-building project. In Afghanistan, U.S. anti-terrorist and anti-insurgent operations led to the development of a fiscally unaffordable national army, despite the fact that co-investments in judicial reform and local administration would bring greater long term dividends in preserving peace and stability. The long-term costs to the Afghan government of funding the security sectorwith pay and grading of the National Army not conducted by governmentare fiscally unsustainable and long-term external assistance is now a precondition for maintaining the Army, unless a reduction in force size is to be entertained. Regional Issues: Turning the spoils of war and conflict into the spoils of peacesecurity, growth, and prosperityis a challenging process. However, whilst much has undoubtedly been achieved since the process of political normalization has been undertaken, 7 the Afghan security and governance situation remains unstable, much of which is due to peripheral regional issues that are only being addressed indirectly. The December 4-5, 2005 conference to enhance regional cooperation demonstrated the opportunities for greater stability and economic cooperation. 8 However, it also underscored that consensus around key issues has still to move beyond rhetoric. The Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), which attended the conference, and is now recognized in the United States as a serious political counter-point in Central Asia, supports the expulsion of U.S. troops from Afghanistan's northern neighbors. The politics of access to oil and gas is also shaping Afghanistan 's prospects. Increasing demand for petroleum combined with high energy prices is catalyzing the pace of political realignment oil between export and oil import statesadding much-needed foreign currency to the national reserves of export states such as Russiawhilst forcing countries such as China to adopt a more aggressive approach to energy market acquisition in countries such as Iran and Russia. Furthermore, inflated global petroleum prices also drive import-dependent countries to seek alternative markets for energy suppliesmany of which involve strengthening foreign relations with non-traditional trading partners. Where governments (such as Bangladesh) operate strict price controls on imported fuels, the fiscal impact has been considerabledrawing finance away from basic services in education, health, and infrastructure, all of which are vital to sustain growth over the longer term. With continued instability in Afghanistan, combined with India's concerns regarding military relations with Pakistan, much of the Turkmen gas may eventually flow northnot southas too might the Caspian basin reserves. Delays in reaching greater stability in Afghanistan represent very real lost future opportunities; a high cost for a weak nation-state. Success in Afghanistan will be expensive, and calls for un-blinking multilateral support for the present reform agendathe new national development strategy. Whilst the southern axis of U.S. foreign policy interestswhich currently runs from Afghanistan through Pakistan to India, shows some signs of greater cohesionPakistan remains a politically-complex state, and the inimical northern states do little to support the emergence of greater stability on the Afghan side of the border. Drugs and military flows are regular trade. Bangladesh too shows signs of increased insurgent activity, and Iranitself an important stabilizer for Afghanistanis under the spotlight of the UN with regard to its nuclear industry. 9 The lesson is clear; creating greater stability in Afghanistana land locked stateas part of an emerging foreign policy realignment, requires a far more comprehensive and collaborative approach to regional security to be adopted. Emerging Lessons in Post Conflict Reconstruction The sequencing of post-conflict reconstruction is an art form, best informed by clear analysis of the political economy, with a particular investment on strengthening the policy environment and institutional capacities in delivery, followed by sustained, consistent, and aligned support over many years. A number of key conclusions can be drawn, many of which resonate with those learned in other post-conflict situations. Political normalization is a sine qua non for all other reconstruction and development activities, as is a regional approach to non-interference: In all post conflict situations, political normalization and defragmentation are fundamental for the reconstruction of state-building and economic growth gains. This has undoubtedly been one of the successes of the Bonn Agreement. External support for state-building and humanitarian investments must be balanced to allow the rapid return of state delivery functions: In many cases, the nature and composition of aid focuses too heavily on humanitarian support at the neglect of early investments in re-establishing the core governance functions of the state. Donors must develop expedited procedures that facilitate rapid disbursement of support for building public finance, civil service, and administrative reforms early on, both centrally and at the subnational level. Needs assessments must look to prioritize key state-building reforms as the entry point for post conflict reconstruction and not create overly elaborate reform programs: In most cases the initial needs assessments underestimate both the costs of reconstruction and the timeframe involved. Transactions costs are often three times higher than in other contexts. Furthermore, procurement of basic services, supplies, and works takes up to 18 months, a time that most post conflict countries can ill afford. In the future, a standard international system for costing post conflict needs assessments could be developed, along with a standard methodology. The national budget must remain the instrument of policy reform, and trust funds are therefore essential to consolidating external assistance and minimizing projectization of the reform program: Aid often bypasses national budgetary systems, creating parallel structures, undermining the centrality of the national budget as the central instrument of policy, and creating parallel systems in service delivery. Yet, in the absence of adequate fiduciary standards within the national administration, trust funds can play a central role in consolidating funding to support a more coordinated and cohesive approach. Aid money does not always contribute to growth: There is a tendency to assume that the key factor of successful reconstruction is the volume of external assistance provided per capitabut in many cases this assistance creates inflationary pressure on wages and basic commodities, including symptoms of Dutch disease.10 Furthermore aid should not try to create growth directly; rather it must work to establish an enabling environment for the growth of the private sector. This requires investments to remove the binding constraints to growthmany of which are almost summarily excludedsuch as the reform of financial markets, justice reform, and the reform of land markets. Reforms must reconcile the need for success with the constructing a fiscally sustainable state: External support is often poorly sequenced. High volumes of humanitarian assistance flow in firstpolicy and institutional strengthening takes timeand by the time the state has established core capabilities, external assistance drops off. In many cases, expensive and unsustainable institutions are established with systems far too complicated for what remains a largely incapacitated state. Furthermore, the costs of highly-effective state institutions, whose start-up has been externally subsidized, are often fiscally unsustainable. As a result, domestic revenue mobilization often does little more than fund recurrent costscompeting for money that was best spent on contracted-out services. Another problem is the prevalence of donor salary top ups, which buy services in the short term, but place the provision of basic services in a precarious state. Bypassing existing national administrative structures and governance systems undermines both immediate and medium-term capacities to self governance: Donors must work to strengthen and not undermine national systems of governance. NGOs and UN agencies often crowd out government and the struggling private sector; also drawing qualified senior service staff out of the civil service into the aid system. As the majority of assistance is channeled outside of the national budget, parallel systems emerge that build what amount to little more than highly unsustainable project-based investments. Importantly, at a time when the newly elected government needs to demonstrate to its citizens what it can deliver, it is NGOs and aid agencies that often claim the credit. Projects with aid community flags all over them undermine the government visibility and yet donors continue to specify visibility in each contract signed. Support for the domestic private sector: Competitive international bidding often favors the highly competitive international private companies and the plethora of international and national NGOs, not domestic companies who are ill-equipped to compete with high-quality tenders, bid bonds, and performance guarantees on contracts. In Afghanistan, the national private sector placed the government under considerable pressure to leverage greater access to reconstruction contracts, few of which have been forthcoming. Monitoring outcomes, not just inputs: Given the volume of external assistance, and the complexity of tracking donor pledges, commitments, disbursements, and actual expenditures, early investment to support the development of national monitoring capacities that track expenditures and expenditure outcomes is vital. In Afghanistan, in spite of billions being invested since late 2001, government capacities to track expenditures and monitor the impact of external assistance are wholly inadequate to meet the demands to be placed on the executive by the national assembly. Conclusion The Afghanistan Compact marks the beginning of the second phase of reformsa phase best characterized by greater government ownership, greater alignment with the national strategy and budget, and reforms that move beyond developing national policies to a heavy focus on building institutions that deliver services efficientlycentrally, and through subnational administration and community groups. Security sector reforms must also look to strengthen and not undermine national security institutions; and in so doing build fiscally sustainable structures that address the root causes of insecurityrather than its effects. Maintaining economic growth, with a focus on high-value production of export orientation is vitalbut in itself this calls for government to remove all the binding constraints to investmentincluding those related to land, finance, taxation, labor enhancement, regulation, and natural resource management. Dealing with the economic implications of successful eradication, and the corresponding contraction of the economy, will again be a major challenge. As a cross-cutting issue, the aid community must look to enhance support for the new national strategy, and the compact, by focusing efforts that build core governance capacities in a sustainable way. The principles of the Paris Declaration on the enhancement of aid effectiveness must be supported if today's achievements are to pave the way for greater stability, peace, and prosperity tomorrow. Whilst the participants of the forthcoming conference must acknowledge the work of the government in establishing a remarkably robust national strategy, the forthcoming conference must not prematurely celebrate its successas the proof of the strategy is still in the making. Increased international community support for the Afghan administration's interim strategy is vital if government is to deliver on its promises to a demanding Afghan people; a people now represented through the eyes and ears of the national assembly. End Notes At the joint press conference to announce the Afghanistan Compact held in Kabul in November 2005, the Minister of Foreign Affairs H.E. Dr. Abdullah Abdullah stated that the London Conference is a renewal of commitment between Afghanistan and the international communitya commitment that is mutual, not one-sided. The President of the United Nations Security Council, Ambassador August P. Mahiga, stated that the London Conference would launch the new Afghan Compact to provide a solid framework for the next stage of reconstruction. In a press briefing in advance of the Afghan national assembly elections, UN Special Representative to Afghanistan Jean Arnault referred to a number of perceived shortcomings of the Bonn Agreement, which largely emanated from the perception that the pace of security and reconstruction lagged behind the political reform process. See http://www.unamaafg.org/news/_pc/_english/2005/_september/05sep17.htm. The I-ANDS process was led by a Presidential Oversight Committee, chaired by Professor Ishaq Naderi, senior economic adviser to the president. The members included Hedayat Amin Arsala, senior adviser to the president and minister of commerce, Dr. Anwar-ul-Haq Ahady, minister of finance, Dr. Mir Mohammad Amin Farhang, minister of economy, Mohammad Haneef Atmar, minister of rural rehabilitation and development. Adib Farhadi, director of Afghanistan Reconstruction and Development Services, led the I-ANDS working group. The Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness was agreed at the High Level Forum by developing and donor countries, the African Development Bank, Asian Development Bank, European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, Inter-American Development Bank, Development Assistance Committee of the OECD, United Nations, and the World Bank. The Forum was hosted by the French government. The Paris Declaration has some 50 commitments to improve aid quality, which will be monitored by twelve indicators. http://www1.worldbank.org/harmonization/Paris/finalparisdeclar ation.pdf. The re-costing exercise; Security Afghanistan's Future: Accomplishments and the Strategic Path Forward, www.af/resources/mof/recosting/SECURING%20AFGHNAISTANS%20FUTUR E.pdf, however, badly underestimated on budget security sector costs, and a revised costing exercise is planned by the Afghan government in 2006 to underpin the new Afghan National Development Strategy. See Mark Sedra & Peter Middlebrook, Beyond Bonn: Revisioning the International Compact for Afghanistan, (Silver City, NM & Washington, DC: Foreign Policy In Focus, November 2005), http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/2912, and Mark Sedra & Peter Middlebrook, Afghanistan's Problematic Path to Peace: Lessons in State Building in the Post-September 11 Era, (Silver City, NM & Washington, DC: Foreign Policy In Focus, March 2004), http://www.fpif.org/papers/2004afgh-stbuild.html. The conference brought together 11countries from the four major zones of which Afghanistan is at the center, including the six countries sharing a border with Afghanistan, plus India, Turkey, UAE, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan. All major economic groupings (ECO, SCO, and SAARC) were present, as was the CAREC program. The conference coincided with the transition from the Bonn Process to the Afghanistan Compact and offered opportunities for the region to work together to promote security and development. The focus of the conference, which was co-chaired by the United Kingdom in its capacity as current president of the G8, was to promote specific forms of economic cooperation in areas of critical concern to the regional countries, including: electricity and energy generation, transport, transit trade, and trade facilitation, including border management; and trade promotion, investment, and improvement of the business climate. For details see http://www.afghanistan-mfa.net/RECC/index.html. The recent success of Hamaswith 76 out of 132 parliamentary seats of the Palestinian parliamentstands testament to the unpredictable nature of democratic elections. Where elected governments fail to deliver, resentment and reactionary forces build support. The resulting foreign exchange windfall creates a high real exchange ratea classic symptom of Dutch disease. Imports therefore become cheap, in effect subsidizing the consumption of the urban population as well as investment goods. The relative cheapness of imported food disadvantages local food production while the relative cheapness of imported capital goods is advantageous for investors holding local currencies, most investors are likely to hold cash positions in other currencies, and the increase in the relative cost of labor and goods discourages investment. Dr. Peter Middlebrook is the joint managing director of Middlebrook and Miller LLC (http://www.middlebrook-miller.com). He has been working with the World Bank and European Commission in Afghanistan since early 2002. He holds a doctorate in hunger and poverty reduction and public sector management from the University of Durham (UK). He was the coordinator of the Securing Afghanistan's Future: Accomplishments and the Strategic Path Forward exercise, and an adviser on the preparation of the Interim Afghan National Development Strategy (2006). Over the past 15 years he has worked with the World Bank, UK Department for International Development (UK-DFID), European Union (EU), and the Netherlands' government, among other partners. His work largely focuses on the political economy of state-building in post conflict situations, and on public sector restructuring and economic governance. Dr. Middlebrook is a regular contributor to Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF)(www.fpif.org). Sharon M. Miller, CPA, is the joint managing director of Middlebrook and Miller LLC (http://www.middlebrook-miller.com). She holds a Masters Degree in International Affairs from Columbia University with a specialization in economic and political development in post-conflict states and is a registered CPA. She has over 10 years of executive-level experience in financial management and investment banking, working for Lehman Brothers and Pricewaterhouse Coopers, among other firms. Since 2000, she has worked in international development in Southeast and Central Asia, for the United Nations, government of Afghanistan, President's Office in the development of national investment programs and in the National Development Strategy, and USAID/ARD. In international development, Ms. Miller's professional engagement largely focuses on private sector development, fiscal management, public finance, and economic reform. Progressive Response Published by Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF), a joint project of the International Relations Center (IRC, online at www.irc-online.org) and the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS, online at www.ips-dc.org). Creative Commons - some rights reserved. Recommended citation: Peter J. Middlebrook and Sharon M. Miller, Lessons in Post Conflict Reconstruction from the New Afghanistan Compact, (Silver City, NM & Washington, DC: Foreign Policy In Focus, January 27, 2006). Web location: http://fpif.org/fpiftxt/3094 Production Information: Author(s): Peter J. Middlebrook and Sharon M. Miller Editor(s): John Gershman, IRC Production: Chellee Chase-Saiz, IRC Latest Comments & Conversation Area Editor's Note: FPIF.org editors read and approve each comment. Comments are checked for content only; spelling and grammar errors are not corrected and comments that include vulgar language or libelous content are rejected. You may add a new comment here. It will not appear on this page until it has been approved by the moderator. Your Name: Comment: Contact the IRC's webmaster with inquiries regarding the functionality of this website. Creative Commons Copyright 2001-2006 IRC. Some rights reserved. You Might Also Like: Related Coverage of Asia/Pacific The Earthquake and the U.S. Response Oct 18, 2005 Atoms for Peace? -- Maybe the N. Koreans Aren't so Crazy Aug 17, 2005 The Indonesian Tribunal: A Matter of Justice or Political Diversion? Aug 30, 2002 Related Coverage of Foreign Aid Issues Related Coverage of Human Rights Issues Bush Administration Attacks on Amnesty International: Old Wine, New Bottles Jun 6, 2005 John Paul II's Economic Ethics Apr 5, 2005 Bait and Switch? 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Foreign Policy In Focus | Living on a Life Support Machine: The Challenge of Rebuilding Afghanistan PartnersForeign Policy In FocusInstitute for Policy StudiesInternational Relations CenterAbout FPIFAbout FPIFStaffGovernance & FundingAdvisory Committ
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U.S. To Announce New Afghan Financial Aid Package - RADIO FREE EUROPE / RADIO LIBERTYRADIO FREE EUROPE / RADIO LIBERTYwww.rferl.org Advanced SearchNews & Analysis | RFE/RL Newsline | Reports | Specials | RFE/RL Press Room Subscribe | Listen | RFE/
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WSJ.com - 'Open for Business' January 31, 2006 COMMENTARY DOW JONES REPRINTS This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers, use the Order Reprints
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WSJ.com - 'Open for Business' January 31, 2006 COMMENTARY DOW JONES REPRINTS This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers, use the Order Reprints
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Afghanistan Five Years LaterOpEdNews.com Original Article at http:/www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_mike_whi_060201_afghanistan_five_yea.htm February 1, 2006 Afghanistan Five Years Later By Mike Whitney Five years after toppling the fanatical Taliban
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Afghan aid meeting gets big U.S. pledge - Print Version - International Herald Tribune Afghan aid meeting gets big U.S. pledge By Alan Cowell The New York Times WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 2006 LONDON The Bush administration pledged on Tuesday to seek con
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Independent Online Edition > Middle East HomeNewsUKCrimeHealth MedicalLegalUK PoliticsThis BritainTransportUlsterEuropeWorldWorld PoliticsScience & TechnologyAfricaAmericasAsiaAustralasiaMiddle EastRobert FiskBusinessBusiness NewsBusiness Analysis &
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Print news - IPS Inter Press Service Inter Press Service News AgencyFriday, February 10, 2006 GMT 02:48AFGHANISTAN: Listen to the Farmer Sanjay Suri For the last two years he has grown no poppy, and his family have begun to feel the pinch. This yea
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Afghanistan welcomes debt cancellations
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Print news - IPS Inter Press Service Inter Press Service News AgencyFriday, February 17, 2006 GMT 05:55AFGHANISTAN: Women Stay Vulnerable to Violence Sher Ahmad Haidar - Pajhwok Afghan News* GHAZNI CITY, Feb 8 (IPS) - 'My father-in-law locked me in
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A brain drain threatens Afghanistan's future - Print Version - International Herald Tribune A brain drain threatens Afghanistan's future Obaid Younossi International Herald Tribune THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2006 WASHINGTON On the eve of the Soviet invasi
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No alternative to opium, say farmers .
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Mounting concern over Afghanistan | csmonitor.comfrom the February 14, 2006 edition http:/www.csmonitor.com/2006/0214/p01s02-wosc.html Mounting concern over Afghanistan Cartoon protests are part of an impatience with the problems of drugs, jobs, co
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OneWorld South Asia - UK helpless as Afghan drug crop doubles OneWorld South Asia Home > In depth > Development > Aid UK helpless as Afghan drug crop doubles Satyavir Chakrapani The enormity of the problems in tackling Afghanistan's massive opium cro
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WSJ.com - Afghanistan Made Some Gains In Fighting Drug Trafficking March 1, 2006 4:50 p.m. ESTDOW JONES REPRINTS This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, client
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Opium Cultivation Rising In Afghanistan
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Hasty poppy eradication in Afghanistan can sow more problems | csmonitor.comfrom the March 23, 2006 edition http:/www.csmonitor.com/2006/0323/p09s01-coop.html Hasty poppy eradication in Afghanistan can sow more problems Peasant farmers left without
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Print news - IPS Inter Press Service Inter Press Service News AgencyFriday, March 31, 2006 00:58 GMTAFGHANISTAN: Women, Socially Bound and Officially Neglected Zarghona Salihi and Habiburahman Ibrahimi - Pajhwok Afghan News* KABUL, Mar 27 (IPS) - W
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A dark season in Afghanistan | csmonitor.comfrom the March 28, 2006 edition http:/www.csmonitor.com/2006/0328/p13s02-bogn.html A dark season in Afghanistan The Taliban may no longer rule, but a writer finds little relief for Afghan women. By Marjor
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'Kabul in Winter,' by Ann Jones - The New York Times - Book Review - New York TimesApril 5, 2006 Books of The Times | 'Kabul in Winter' Lowly Status of Women in a Land Struggling to Rise By WILLIAM GRIMES In December 2002, Ann Jones flew to Afghani
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TCA - English Language Newspaper in Central Asia Afghan Turkmen suspicious of modern medical treatment Date:21-04-2006 08:20 Country: Turkmenistan Source:TCA<> Author:By Muhammad Tahir*PRAGUE, April 21 (TCA). Rozgeldi was 53 when he found out he ha
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Terraviva EUROPEWednesday, 26 April 2006 AFGHANISTAN: FARMERS FIGHT BAN ON POPPY GROWING by Ahmad Ihsan Sarwaryar, Nadeem Kohistani and Zubair Babakarkhel KABUL (IPS) - Agitated poppy farmers in western Herat province say they will not destroy thei
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Afghanistan facing 'major health crisis' SearchFront Page News . . . Politics Economy Election Human Rights Drugs Sport Refugees Have Your Say Headlines About Us AdvertiseQuick Vote Security situation is detoriating in Afghanistan. Yes N
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Afghanistan facing 'major health crisis' AfghanNews.net -Investment climate improving World Bank 27. Februaryy 2006, 16:34 KABUL (IRIN) - A World Bank report released on Saturday said that the investment climate in Afghanistan was improving, but ide
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Contact l SitemapWAR PROFITEERSAfghanistan, Inc.: A CorpWatch Investigative ReportFariba Nawa, an Afghan-American who returned to her native country to examine the progress of reconstruction, uncovers some examples of where the money has (and ha
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CorpWatch Afghanistan, Inc.: A CorpWatch Investigative ReportContractors in Afghanistan are making big money for bad work A highway that begins crumbling before it is finished. A school with a collapsed roof. A clinic with faulty plumbing. A farmer
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TCA - English Language Newspaper in Central Asia Afghanistan among top ten failed states Date:03-05-2006 12:35 Country: Central Asia Source:Inter Press Service<> Author:WASHINGTON, May 3 (Inter Press Service). Despite receiving some billion a month
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TCA - English Language Newspaper in Central Asia AFGHANISTAN KAZAKHSTAN KYRGYZSTAN TAJIKISTAN TURKMENISTAN UZBEKISTAN CENTRAL ASIA News Catalog Classifieds Search Subscribe F.A.Q Country Guide > Get Free Newsletter: Contact us | Advertise | About TCA
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Afghanistan: Mortality Rates Remain High For Mothers, Newborns - RADIO FREE EUROPE / RADIO LIBERTYRADIO FREE EUROPE / RADIO LIBERTYwww.rferl.org Advanced SearchNews & Analysis | RFE/RL Newsline | Reports | Specials | RFE/RL Pressroom Subscribe | L
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Afghan reporters focus on roots of insurgents' unrest | csmonitor.comfrom the May 18, 2006 edition http:/www.csmonitor.com/2006/0518/p04s02-wosc.html Afghan reporters focus on roots of insurgents' unrest By David Montero | Correspondent of The Chri
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Broken Promises: Foreign Aid Squandered in Afghanistan News | Polls | Association | Directory | Advertising Services | Events | AwardsHome/News By Ethnicities African African American Asian South Asian European Indigenous Latino Middle Eastern Spec
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Afghanistan: Saffron Could Help Wean Farmers Off Opium Poppies - RADIO FREE EUROPE / RADIO LIBERTYRADIO FREE EUROPE / RADIO LIBERTYwww.rferl.org Advanced SearchNews & Analysis | RFE/RL Newsline | Reports | Specials | RFE/RL Pressroom Subscribe | L
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Eurasia Insight - Afhanistan and its Future Eurasia Insight: AFHGANISTAN AND ITS FUTURE Ahmed Rashid: 6/26/06 A EurasiaNet Commentary Five years after Western countries promised Afghans to rebuild their country, Afghanistan is on the brink, facing it
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Afghanistan's Future, Lost in the Shuffle - The Archive - The New York Times NYTimes Go to a Section - Arts Automobiles Books Business Cartoons Classifieds Corrections Crossword/Games Dining & Wine Editorials/Op-Ed Education Fashion & Style Health Ho
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BBC NEWS | South Asia | UN warns over Afghanistan drought UN warns over Afghanistan drought By Mark Dummet BBC News, Kabul The United Nations in Afghanistan says that millions are facing hunger this year because of drought and that it does not have t
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Paris Club Agrees Afghan Debt Relief Deal - RADIO FREE EUROPE / RADIO LIBERTYRADIO FREE EUROPE / RADIO LIBERTYwww.rferl.org Advanced SearchNews & Analysis | RFE/RL Newsline | Reports | Specials | RFE/RL Pressroom Subscribe | Listen | RFE/RL Langua
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A Voice From Kandahar - Sarah Chayes - Opinion - New York Times Blog - Times SelectHome Page My Times Today's Paper Video Most Popular Times Topics Opinion All NYT OpinionWorld U.S. N.Y. / Region Business Technology Science Health Sports Opinion Edit
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odiousdebts.orgodiousdebts.org July 31/2006 Analysis: Afghanistan at the Paris Club by Eurodad On July 19th 2006 the Paris Club of creditor nations granted Afghanistan the so-called 'Naples Terms,' with a 67% cancellation (US$1.6 billion) of its arre
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Transitions Online: Afghanistan's Stock Rises TRANSITIONS ONLINE: Central Asia: Afghanistan's Stock Rises by Stephen Blank 7 August 2006 If stability ever comes to Afghanistan, the country could become a significant player on the regional energy mark
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WSJ.com - Keeping the Faith August 11, 2006 TASTE DOW JONES REPRINTS This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers, use the Order Reprints tool at
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Afghan Opium Cultivation Hits a Record - New York TimesAugust 16, 2006 Afghan Opium Cultivation Hits a Record By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Filed at 3:06 p.m. ET KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) - Opium cultivation in Afghanistan has hit record levels - up by mor
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Afghan News Network - Printer Friendly VersionAfghanNews.netAfghanistan: economic activity more important than military action 26. August 2006, 17:17 AFP - Economic development in Afghanistan is more important than military action, with the efforts
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The News Tribune - Record opium year in Afghanistan (print) Tacoma, WA - Thursday, August 17, 2006 < Back to Regular Story Page Record opium year in Afghanistan FISNIK ABRASHI; The Associated Press Last updated: August 17th, 2006 01:20 AM (PDT) KABUL
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Print Story: UN to announce 'significant increase' in Afghan opium crops: US on Yahoo! NewsBack to Story - Help UN to announce 'significant increase' in Afghan opium crops: US by P. Parameswaran Thu Aug 31, 6:11 PM ET The United Nations is expected t
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Printing.http:/www.atimes.com Why it's not working in Afghanistan By Ann Jones Remember when peaceful, democratic, reconstructed Afghanistan was advertised as the exemplar for the extreme makeover of Iraq? In August 2002, US Secretary of Defense Dona
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Alarm in Washington over deepening disaster in AfghanistanWorld Socialist Web Site www.wsws.orgWSWS : News & Analysis : Asia : Afghanistan Alarm in Washington over deepening disaster in Afghanistan By James Cogan 30 August 2006 Back to screen versi
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FT.com / Comment & analysis / Analysis - Afghanistan on course to failureSkip to main content, accesskey 's' Homepage, accesskey '1' Financial Times FT.comCOMMENT & ANALYSIS AnalysisSubscription pageCloseAfghanistan on course to failure By Rachel Mor
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Scotsman.com News - Latest News - Making every drop count, Coke opens in AfghanistanPlease note: Your browser has been unable to load the stylesheet that accompanies this page. The page is still readable. [Accessibility statement] [Skip to navigation
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Afghan News Network - Printer Friendly VersionAfghanNews.netThe risks of childbirth in Afghanistan 10. September 2006, 09:50 By Jane Elliott, BBC News For women like Rabia, giving birth is a very risky business. Not only did she discover she had a
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Doubts intensify over Afghanistan's future | csmonitor.com from the September 11, 2006 edition http:/www.csmonitor.com/2006/0911/p06s01-wosc.html Doubts intensify over Afghanistan's future Critics say President Karzai and the West must redouble effor
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Independent Online Edition > Asia HomeNewsUKCrimeHealth MedicalLegalUK PoliticsThis BritainTransportUlsterEuropeWorldWorld PoliticsScience & TechnologyAfricaAmericasAsiaAustralasiaMiddle EastRobert FiskBusinessBusiness NewsBusiness Analysis & Feature
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USAID to provide small loans to thousands of farmers UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs Friday 20 October 2006 AFGHANISTAN: USAID to provide small loans to thousands of farmers IRIN Weaning Afghan farmers off opium is one of the
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Taliban Rising Click here to return to the browser-optimized version of this page. This article can be found on the web at http:/www.thenation.com/doc/20061030/parenti_videoTaliban Rising by CHRISTIAN PARENTI [posted online on October 12, 2006] Afg
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Millions face hunger as drought worsens, warns aid group UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs Friday 20 October 2006 AFGHANISTAN: Millions face hunger as drought worsens, warns aid IRIN Farmer, now displaced due to drought QALAT, 1
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Running Dry: the humanitarian impact of the global water crisisRunning Dry: the humanitarian impact of the global water crisis IRIN In-Depth AFGHANISTAN: Water crisis a growing human tragedy Print this reportYears of drought, armed conflict and a l
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Ask the Afghans - WSJ.com November 10, 2006 REVIEW & OUTLOOK DOW JONES REPRINTS This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers, use the Order Repri
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Afghan Drug Boom Fuels Child Addiction RatesVacancies Vacancies Internships Internships Reporting Reporting Research & Training Research & Training Mentor Programme Mentor Programme Safety & Security Safety & Security Current Programmes Current Pro
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Afghan Opium: A Failed Jihad?Vacancies Vacancies Internships Internships Reporting Reporting Research & Training Research & Training Mentor Programme Mentor Programme Safety & Security Safety & Security Current Programmes Current Programmes Past Pr
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WSJ.com - Singapore's Monetary Authority Selects Shanmugaratnam as Managing DirectorBusiness Fare United Airlines has changed course and will honor extremely low-priced tickets it sold last month based on a technical glitch at its Web site. Questio
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WSJ.com - Singapore's New Budget Is Filled With Tax CutsWeekend Journal Retailers push shoppers to spruce up on the small things. American caviar is bursting onto the scene. Read more in Weekend Journal. Question of the Day How do you feel about th
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WSJ.com - Singapore Plans to Reduce Its Stake in Certain Outfits Article Search Advanced Search / Help Quotes & Research Symbol(s)Name Market U.S.BrazilCanadaChileMexicoVenezuela-AustraliaHong KongJapanKoreaSingaporeTaiwan-BelgiumFinlandFranceGermany