Gulf Today

Turkish CB nearly doubles 2022 inflation forecast to 43 per cent

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Turkey’s annual inflation will peak at around 70 per cent by June before declining to near 43 per cent by year-end, the central bank forecast on Thursday, almost quadruple its forecast before a full-blown currency crisis sent inflation to a two-decade high.

The central bank slashed its policy rate by 500 basis points to 14 per cent last year as part of President Tayyip Erdogan’s new economic plan.

The cuts sparked a currency crisis that sent inflation to 61 per cent in March amid a rise in

Turkey’s central bank slashed its policy rate by 500 basis points to 14 per cent last year as part of President Tayyip Erdogan’s new economic plan

global energy costs due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Governor Sahap Kavcioglu made the forecast of inflation peaking at around 70 per cent before June in a presentati­on on Thursday, adding it should fall to single digits by end-2024.

Disinflati­on will begin in coming months “thanks to a gradual decrease in supply-demand mismatches and disruption­s in supply chains, in addition to the results of the steps taken for price stability,” Kavcioglu said. By the end of this year, annual inflation would stand at around 42.8 per cent, the governor said, near double the central bank’s previous forecast of 23.2 per cent.

Its forecast for end-2022 stood at 11.8 per cent in

October. The median estimate in the latest Reuters poll stood at 55.5 per cent. The central bank has focused on wiping out Turkey’s current account deficits by boosting exports and increasing the share of the lira in the financial system, which it says will help establish price stability.

But the global rise in commoditie­s prices due to the Ukraine conflict has made that target more difficult to achieve.

Export-driven growth and current account balance are important for price stability, Kavcioglu said on Thursday, adding that Turkey’s economy is seen expanding 7 per cent in the first quarter this year.

Since the rate cuts, which Erdogan had sought for some time, the central bank has kept the benchmark rate steady in four meetings this year despite soaring inflation.

Kavcioglu defended the rate cuts, saying economic developmen­ts showed they were the correct decision. He said if it weren’t for the Ukraine conflict, the central bank might have kept its inflation forecast in January.

He also said tourism is expected to increase this year, despite the war in Ukraine. Russia and Ukraine are two of the biggest sources of visitors. Bookings from the European Union and the Middle East have increased sharply, Kavcioglu said.

Turkish lira stood at 14.8150 at 1056 GMT, slightly weaker than its close on Wednesday.

Kavcioglu also said one of the “essential elements” of the bank’s strategy would now be increasing the share of lira in the financial system, as part of a “liraisatio­n” strategy to achieve price stability.

The ultimate target is to build a financial structure in which all “economic units” use only the local currency in decision making. Meanwhile Dr Thani Bin Ahmed Al Zeyoudi, UAE’S Minister of State for Foreign Trade and Mohamed Mosh, Minister of Trade of Turkey discussed different initiative­s to foster business and investment partnershi­ps between the business communitie­s of the two countries during a round table held on April 27th in Istanbul.

The two ministers also discussed ways to utilise the qualitativ­e leaps recently achieved by bilateral and economic relations, and arrangemen­ts for finalising the forthcomin­g Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p Agreement (CEPA) between the two countries.

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Tourists shop at the Grand Bazaar in Istanbul, Turkey.
Reuters ↑ Tourists shop at the Grand Bazaar in Istanbul, Turkey.

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