Los Angeles Times

Afghanistan's money is crumbling to pieces, just like its economy

A man counts his Afghan currency before paying for bread in an open air street market in Kabul, Afghanistan, Thursday, Sept. 8, 2022.

KABUL, Afghanistan — Remember cash? These days, when a wave of a phone or credit card gets you a cup of coffee or more, it's easy to forget what actual bills look like — and the abuse they receive in an average five-year life span.

Not for Allah Mohammad Araya. In a country so sanctioned that much of its own cash is out of reach, he sat cross-legged in a corner of Kabul's main foreign-exchange market, sifting through a pile of what looked like paper trash but was actually a disaster area of distressed afghanis, Afghanistan's currency.

"Out of every 10,000 afghani bills here, maybe 1,000 of those bills are still OK to use," he said, pointing to a 100-afghani note faded to the point that one side seemed plain. Another looked more Scotch tape than bill. A third wasn't much better, the victim of a bad cut-and-paste job that left its color

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