Is the tide finally turning for Turkey? Three months after the re-election of Recep Tayyip Erdoğan for his third term as president, whichmany fearedwould lead to economic chaos, ratings agency Moody’sthat Turkey’s credit rating is on course for an upgrade.
Since the election, Erdoğana new economic team with a commitment to reintroduce conventional monetary policies after years of a more singular approach. This has yielded some early positive results, with June recording the firstin 18 months – meaning more money came into the country than went out (mostly due to tourism and lower energy imports).
Meanwhile,has been attracting surging interest from foreign investors, and theagainst the risk of the government defaulting on its debts has sharply declined. So what’s going on?
The mess
When Erdoğan won the May election,, it extended his tenure as prime minister and then president to almost 20 years. This five-year term is likely to be his last, due to his deteriorating health and constitutional constraints. Thanks to the economic debacle that he created himself, it is also likely to be his most challenging.
There are two pillars to Erdoğanomics: the “unorthodox” view that high interest rates cause inflation rather than the other way around, and a fixation on keeping rates as low as possible. It became much easier for him to implement after becoming, which gave him much more power.
Central bank governors who have disagreed with Erdoğan’s agendashown the door, most notably Naci Ağbal, who was sacked in March in 2021 after only four months in office. It was the next governor, Şahap Kavcıoğlu, a former MP in the ruling party and columnist in a pro-Erdoğan newspaper, who put Erdoğanomics into overdrive. Turkey experimented with aggressively cutting rates at a time when inflation was already close to 20% and most central banks were tightening.
Official inflation skyrocketed to over 80% and thelira plummeted, forcing the central bank to sell substantialto try and shore up the currency. The current account deficit widened to ain January andin February further worsened the situation.
Turkish inflation and the falling lira
This all happened despite the fact that the authorities struggled to impose their interest rate cuts on the wider economy. Whereas normally high-street interest rates move in line with the central bank rate, Turkish banks responded to the central-bank rate cut by increasing rates on consumer and business loans and savings accounts, signalling they didn’t think the central bank’s policy was sustainable. Loan rates for businesses only later came down after thea capital boost in the run-up to the election.
The interest rate divergence
A new approach?
The president has now taken a different path. He has appointed former investment bankeras finance minister. Şimşek is respected by the markets due to amanaging Turkey’s economy between 2007 and 2018. He has vowed to return to, announcing: “We will prioritise macro financial stability.”
Another reversal signal has been the appointment ofas the first female governor of Turkey’s central bank. She too comes from investment banking, having formerly been managing director at Goldman Sachs and co-CEO of First Republic Bank in the US. She has no central banking experience, buther appointment. She has an outstanding resume compared to her predecessor, Kavcıoğlu.
Erkan hiked rates on June 22, the highest in nearly two years. Theexpressed a clear view that this is the way to reduce inflation.
The lira has nevertheless, whilerose from 38% to 48% in July. But along with the other improvements I mentioned at the beginning, there has also been ain foreign exchange reserves, indicating that the central bank is under less pressure to defend the currency.
In July, the markets were further reassured by the appointments of high-profile economists asfor the central bank. This further. On July 20, the bank hiked interest rates again,.
What next
Raising interest rates may have side effects. Turkey has one of the world’s highest percentages of “” that have only been able to stay afloat because of low borrowing costs, so there could well be bankruptcies. Also, we know from the recent US banking failures that rate hikeson banks by reducing the value of their bond portfolios.
Turkey’s banks are obviously not new to life under Erdoğan.fine management teams and effective risk-management practices that are used to weathering the country’s economic storms. All the same, they look vulnerable because they holdthat could be impaired by aggressive rate hikes – particularly since they are denominated in lira, which creates exposure to further currency collapses. The government could alleviate this concern by swapping these bonds in exchange for new high-yielding ones.
The bigger question is whether we’re really seeing the end of Erdoğanomics or just a lull. We can’t rule out a repeat of 2021, when Ağbal was installed as central bank governor despite his orthodox economic views,shortly after. Erdoğan has already put Şahap Kavcıoğlu, his biddable governor from 2021-23, in charge of Turkey’s banking watchdog, which doesn’t suggest a total break from the past and has confused markets.
The danger is that Erdoğan won’t allow interest rate hikes in the run-up to the local elections in March 2024. On the other hand, voters in cities such as Istanbul and Ankara have been severely affected by inflation. Theyagainst Erdoğan in the presidential election, having already handed metropolitan control to the opposition in 2019.
To regain these cities,tame inflation and alleviate the cost of living crisis. He may also be motivated by a desire to hand a better economy to his preferred successor (likely to be either his son or son-in-law), who might not enjoy his levels of popularity.
Whatever happens, much damage has already been done. The nation’sis US$10,616 (£8,335), well below its peak of US$12,508 in 2013 (albeit it has grown for the past couple of years). Turkey has lost significant numbers ofto other countries.
Halting this brain drain, or even reversing it, will be crucial for future economic growth. Thisunder Erdoğan’s leadership. Avoiding a financial crisis is only the first step forward.