Climate represents one of the most critical determinants influencing human life and societal development. The significance of climate in shaping socio-economic conditions has arguably never been more prominently discussed in macroeconomic and socio-environmental discourse than it is today. Nevertheless, many policymakers and decision-makers remain insufficiently cognizant of the profound influence of climatic factors on economic and social systems.
Currently, scholars across political, economic, social, and environmental disciplines recognize climate change as one of the most complex and consequential challenges confronting humanity. It is anticipated that climate change will progressively generate multifaceted socio-economic and environmental ramifications, particularly affecting economic dimensions. While the economic implications of climatic variability are not a novel phenomenon, the contemporary scale, intensity, and associated financial costs are unprecedented, posing substantial burdens for certain regions and states.
Climate change is expected to exert both direct and indirect effects across multiple sectors, including agriculture, tourism, energy, public health, labor productivity, employment, economic growth, poverty incidence, and migration, thereby producing significant economic repercussions. However, these impacts are not geographically uniform. From an economic standpoint, certain regions may perceive climate change as a potential opportunity, offering geoeconomic advantages within the global economic system. Conversely, for many developing nations, particularly those situated in arid and semi-arid zones, climate change constitutes a severe crisis with profound geopolitical and socio-economic consequences.
Given its critical importance, this study seeks to examine the economic ramifications of climate change through a descriptive-analytical methodology. This topic is particularly pertinent due to notable gaps in existing climate change literature, with Afghanistan exemplifying one of the region’s most vulnerable to the intertwined climatic and economic challenges.

