Afghanistan–Pakistan transit trade falls to 11,592 containers worth $367 million in FY26, a steep decline from nearly 89,000 containers valued at about $5 billion before the Taliban returned to power in 2021, according to a report cited by Dawn and the Economic Times. The outlets say Pakistan’s border closure with Afghanistan in October 2025 over security concerns contributes to the fall, but data indicates the downturn starts earlier. Transit volumes had already weakened after reaching a post-2021 peak: container traffic rose to 102,886 containers worth $6.7 billion in FY23, then declined to 54,114 containers in FY24 and to 42,959 containers worth $1.36 billion in FY25—before the border was closed. Trade analysts quoted in the report say Kabul is pursuing a strategy to reduce dependence on Pakistani ports by expanding routes through Iran and strengthening ties with Central Asian neighbours.

The report also highlights a sharper collapse in “reverse transit,” which enables Afghan exports to reach third countries via Pakistan. Reverse transit falls from $454 million in FY25 to $7 million in FY26. The World Bank and traders’ accounts cited say the shift toward longer routes raises transport and logistics costs, contributes to inflation, and reduces livelihoods for people involved in cross-border commerce.