The Christian Science Monitor today reports on an emerging trend in Afghanistan: entrepreneurship among women. Good news out of the Middle East is rare these days, and this article offers hope that conditions are improving for everyone in a country ruled by the oppressive Taliban until just a few years ago. The article points to a report from Microfinance Times that found 75 percent of all active microcredit borrowers in Afghanistan are now women, many of whom use their loans to start businesses.
Like their American counterparts, Afghan small-business owners—and women in particular—are leading the way in rebuilding their country’s shaky economy. Reports indicate some 10,000 women have started businesses in that country during the past few years. “Businesspeople are the ambassadors of peace in the world. If we've got women entrepreneurs, other women will feel that business can help them make a better life. This creates an atmosphere to create a factory or an industry, and brings in investors,” says Suraya Parlika, founder of All Afghan Women’s Union.
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