6

Turkey’s central bank sharply raised interest rates on Thursday, the clearest sign yet that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is shifting his country toward more orthodox economic policies in the hope of taming a painful cost-of-living crisis.

The spike in rates, to 15 percent from 8.5 percent, came less than a month after Mr. Erdogan, Turkey’s dominant politician for two decades, won a third presidential term despite a challenge from a newly unified opposition, high inflation that has left many Turks feeling poorer and catastrophic earthquakes in February that killed more than 50,000 people.

Members of Turkey’s opposition had feared that Mr. Erdogan would capitalize on his victory to crack down on his opponents and further consolidate power. But to date he has made no drastic moves and has largely stuck to his previous positions, including the use of Turkey’s membership in NATO to block Sweden from joining the alliance.

His largest shift has been in economic policy, an apparent effort to head off the threat of interlocking economic problems that economists say are largely of Mr. Erdogan’s making.

The official annual inflation rate rose above 80 percent last year and was at 39.5 percent last month, eroding the purchasing power of Turkish families and sending the nation’s currency, the lira, plunging to record lows. Outside groups have accused the government of manipulating the statistics, saying the actual inflation rate is twice as high.

In the run-up to last month’s election, Mr. Erdogan tapped the central bank’s foreign currency reserves to prevent the lira from falling further while unleashing billions of dollars of new spending to insulate voters from the immediate impact of high inflation. He increased the minimum wage, hiked civil servant salaries and changed regulations to allow millions of Turks to draw early government pensions.

Mr. Erdogan also insisted on repeatedly reducing interest rates, from 19 percent in 2021 to 8.5 percent this year, in defiance of orthodox economic theory and practice, which call for raising rates to control inflation.

Since his victory on May 28, Mr. Erdogan has not directly announced a change of course, but has made several moves that point to more conventional economic policies that, while aimed at taming inflation and reducing the threat of a currency crisis, could also throw the economy into a recession.

He reappointed Mehmet Simsek, a highly regarded former Merrill Lynch banker and minister in Mr. Erdogan’s government, as finance minister. To head the central bank, he named Hafize Gaye Erkan, a Princeton-educated economist and former executive at the now-defunct First Republic Bank. Ms. Erkan is the first woman in Turkey to hold the post.

In announcing the interest rate hike, the bank said that further increases would follow “in a timely and gradual manner until a significant improvement in the inflation outlook is achieved.”

Given the new appointments, many analysts had expected an even bolder rate hike, and the value of the lira continued to slide after the new rate was announced.

Mr. Erdogan has long promoted the unorthodox idea that lower rates lead to lower inflation, a theory that did not work out but that did deliver continuous economic growth.

It remains unclear whether Mr. Erdogan will continue to allow interest rates to rise if Turkey’s economy starts to slow.

Ben Hubbard is the Istanbul bureau chief. He has spent more than a dozen years in the Arab world, including Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Yemen. He is the author of “MBS: The Rise to Power of Mohammed bin Salman.”

no comments (yet)
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
there doesn't seem to be anything here
this post was submitted on 22 Jun 2023
6 points (100.0% liked)

anime_titties

1907 readers
1 users here now

A place to discuss world news and geopolitics. You can join our discord at https://discord.gg/DtnRnkE

Rules:

Rule 1: Follow general etiquette and common sense

Applies to posts and comments

Rule 2: Posting Guidelines

Applies to posts 2.1 - Types of submissions

2.1.1 Submissions must be links to news articles.

2.1.2 The source must either be the original website or an archive of the original.

2.1.3 Submissions may not be older than 14 days.

2.1.4 The submission’s title may not be editorialised (express opinions rather than just report the news). If the country/countries involved is not apparent, put their names in the title in brackets 2.2 - Submissions must pertain to politics or major events

2.2.1 Interactions, relations, and developments between:

A. Governments: Nation-states, top-level subdivisions, or autonomous regions

B. Major non-state actors: Large multi-national corporations, trans-national unions/institutions, regional warlords, terrorist organisations, major independence movements, or international criminal organisations

2.2.2 Significant internal political developments with direct consequences to their region or the wider world.

2.2.3 Major aspects of the climate, environment and health.

2.2.4 Major disasters, both natural and man-made, affecting large groups of people or wide areas. 2.3 - US/China/India content restriction

2.3.1 The number of paragraphs with more than a passing reference to the USA, China or India in any capacity should not exceed more than 50% of the article. Includes special administrative regions such as Hong Kong, Guam, Macau and Puerto Rico.

2.3.2 Major non-state actors (as described in 2.2.1-B) are exempt from the 50% rule

2.3.3 If it is unclear due to large or inconsistently sized paragraphs, then the same criteria should be applied to the number of sentences instead. 2.4 - Content quality

2.4.1 Submissions must be of good quality. As such, the following content is strictly prohibited:

Advertisements

Conspiracy theories

Personal blog posts

Satire

Debunked/fabricated content

2.4.2 The quality of content will be reviewed on a case-by-case basis and is at the discretion of the moderators. 2.5 - Non-English articles

2.5.1 Non-english articles may be posted, but only if accompanied by a comment containing the article’s English translation.

2.5.2 Translation must be conducted by using either DeepL or Google Translate.

2.5.3 Do not use your own translation unless it is being used to rectify errors in the software’s translation.

2.5.4 Localisation corrections (such as figure of speech) should be provided in square brackets beside the original. Rule 3: Spamming and agendaposting

Applies to posts and comments 3.1 - Spamming

3.1.1 A user may only submit 5 posts per 24 hours. Any submissions that exceed this 5-post limit will automatically be removed.

3.1.2 A user can only post if the account has at least 200 comment karma.

3.1.3 Users may not engage in disruptive behaviour or no-value added spamming, including brigading. 3.2 - Agendaposting

3.2.1 Agendaposting is the process of only, or mostly submitting posts that conform to a certain agenda or political stance. This is strictly prohibited.

3.2.2 If more than 67% of recent posts are considered to be exclusively pushing the same agenda, then action will be taken.

3.2.3 Users are prohibited from accusing other users of agendaposting in the comments. Complaints on particular suspected agendaposters are only allowed via the report system, or via modmailing with substantial evidence to demonstrate a said user is an agendaposter.

3.2.4 Agendaposting is reviewed on a case-by-case basis at the discretion of the moderators. Rule 4: Keep it civil

Applies to comments

4.1 To encourage healthy debates, the following behaviours are prohibited:

Personal attacks

Name-calling

Harassment of any kind

Discrimination, including: Age, disability, ethnicity, gender, origin, religion, or sexual orientation

4.2 Attacks will be reviewed on a case-by-case basis at the discretion of the moderators.

4.3 Retaliation in the same manner is also forbidden - perpetrators should instead be reported.

4.4 Whataboutism and similar off-topic deviation is prohibited in top-level comments and replies, and as primary focus of a comment, in order to keep discussions on topic with respect to the contents of the post. Whataboutism will be reviewed on a case-by-case basis at the discretion of the moderators.

4.5 Linking to Comments and Posts unrelated to the current topic and to users not involved in the current conversation (excluding mods or exceptionally informative comments shared in good faith) is not allowed. Any unrelated link will be removed and any user suspected of sharing links in attempt to harass or encourage harassment will be permanently banned from participation.

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS