ECONOMY — April 17, 2026
Food Prices in Afghanistan Rise by Up to 47 Percent, World Food Programme Reports
The World Food Programme reports that food prices in Afghanistan have risen by up to 47 percent year-on-year, with notable increases in staples such as rice, while limited job opportunities averaging 1.7 workdays a week add to economic pressures on households.
The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Amu TV — corroborated by ToloNews and Khaama Press — 2 min read

The World Food Programme says food prices in Afghanistan have increased by up to 47 percent compared to the same period last year.
Its latest report for the second week of April shows rice prices have gone up by 24 to 47 percent, wheat by about 20 percent, cooking oil by 10 percent and sugar by nearly 19 percent.
The agency notes that weekly price changes remain limited for most items, although liquefied petroleum gas prices continue to increase. Approximately 60 percent of imports are now entering through the Islam Qala border crossing with Iran, a shift that has raised transportation costs along western and northern supply routes.
Prices for non-food items have also risen, with diesel up 14 percent year on year and chemical fertilizers increasing by 35 percent in some cases.
The labor market is providing an average of only 1.7 work days per week, significantly affecting household incomes and purchasing power.
Specific impacts are seen in vegetable markets. Lettuce prices fell by more than 10 percent in the past week but are 65 percent higher than last year. Potato prices have nearly doubled because of reduced imports from Iran and stopped shipments from Pakistan.
Taken together, rising costs, supply issues and scarce employment opportunities are placing serious pressure on Afghan families, the World Food Programme report concludes.
Read the original reporting at Amu TV →
Reliability assessment
Three independent Afghan outlets (Amu TV, ToloNews, Khaama Press) corroborate the World Food Programme's on-record report detailing specific year-on-year price increases (rice 24-47%, wheat ~20%, etc.) and related economic data. This is a clear 'WFP stated Y' attribution from a named reputable organization, satisfying the criteria for reliable without any contestation of the report's existence.
The source language reads straight.
Independent web corroboration
An independent web search turned up no separate corroborating reports. Treat the account as single-sourced until more outlets pick it up.
Across the newsrooms
Where reports agree
- The World Food Programme released a report for the second week of April on food prices and related economic indicators in Afghanistan.
- Food prices have risen substantially year-over-year, with rice seeing the highest increase up to 47%.
- Supply routes have shifted, with heavy reliance on the Islam Qala border crossing with Iran, leading to higher transport costs.
- Weekly price changes are limited for most food items, but LPG prices continue to rise.
- The labor market remains weak with average work at 1.7 days per week and reduced purchasing power due to price increases.
- Non-food items such as diesel and chemical fertilizers have also experienced year-over-year price rises.
Filed by 3 outlets
Amu TV
Originating
Reported straight
Reported straight
ToloNews
Reported straight
Reported straight
Khaama Press
Reported straight
Reported straight
Filed under
Economy — World Food Programme, Food Prices, Inflation, Supply Chains, Afghanistan Economy
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