After the financial crisis, four measures were taken: First, under the negotiation requirements of the International Monetary Fund, a monetary policy goal of controlling currency issuance within 30% increment and inflation within 5% increment was determined before 2004, and then a stable floating exchange rate system was determined according to inflation expectations from 1 in 2004. The second is to restore people's confidence in banks. During the crisis, the number of banks in China was reduced from more than 90 to more than 50, and the income level of employees was also reduced by half. Measures such as freezing deposits and forcing pesoization are more harmful to depositors (peso deposits have depreciated by more than 2/3), and people are unwilling and afraid to deposit in banks. After the crisis, when the government issued a call to restore people's confidence in banks, people responded to the government's call, and their savings rebounded rapidly, reaching 64.72 million pesos in June 2003, an increase of 9.92 million pesos compared with the lowest 540,000 pesos in July 2002, with an average monthly increase of 1.7%. Third, encourage banks to increase loans to the private sector, fundamentally change the practice of requiring banks to increase loans to the public sector too much before the crisis, and promote economic recovery. Fourth, strictly restrict the remittance of US dollars and the import of commodities, encourage the export of agricultural products and attract foreign tourists to Afghanistan to increase the current account surplus. Fourth, while reforming the tax system and strengthening the collection and management, efforts should be made to control fiscal expenditure and achieve fiscal balance or surplus.