Arab News

Turkish economy to shrink for first time in a decade this year

Ankara has not imposed a full lockdown to maintain some economic activity

- Reuters Istanbul

Turkey’s economy is expected to contract this year for the first time in over a decade as the coronaviru­s pandemic slashes output through mid-year, and it’s unlikely to grow again until 2021, a Reuters poll showed on Tuesday.

The median forecast of 40 economists was for a contractio­n of 1.4 percent in 2020, with drops in the second and third quarters of 8.6 percent and 5.3 percent respective­ly. Before the coronaviru­s outbreak, the government expected the economy to expand 5 percent this year after rebounding from a recession last year. government has not updated its gross domestic product forecast since the country recorded its first case of the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) in mid-March. The virus has since spread, putting Turkey seventh globally in confirmed coronaviru­s cases.

The economy is expected to grow again next year by 3.7 percent, according to the poll’s median. For the first quarter of this year, the official report due on May 29 is forecast to show growth of 4.4 percent. Ankara has shut schools and some businesses, closed borders and adopted weekend lockdowns. But it has stopped short of imposing a full stay-at-home order in an effort to support some economic activity.

Economists said robust lending in the first quarter positioned Turkey relatively well as it headed into the global downturn.

“We think that all sectors of the economy will be affected by COVID-19 and we assume that most of the negative impact would concentrat­e on Q2-Q3 2020,” UBS economists said.

“Both investment­s and exports should outright contract in 2020 given the global slowdown from the pandemic. However, credit growth — while clearly expected to fall notably from current levels — might remain flat by end-2020.” Turkey’s economy last contractTh­e ed on an annual basis in 2009, by 4.7 percent. From 2010 to 2018, its average growth rate was more than 5 percent thanks to a constructi­on boom driven by cheap capital following the global financial crisis. A currency crisis in 2018 was set off by concerns over central bank independen­ce and tension between Ankara and Washington. That led to three straight quarters of economic contractio­n and a modest annual growth rate of 0.9 percent last year.

Since July, the central bank has cut rates to 9.75 percent from 24 percent to boost growth and reflect declining inflation.

In the poll, economists predicted that the central bank would cut to reach 8 percent by July as it ramps up its response to the outbreak, according to the median response.

FASTFACT

Turkey’s economy last contracted on an annual basis in 2009.

 ?? Reuters ?? A worker disinfects Kilic Ali Pasha Mosque in Istanbul, Turkey, where authoritie­s have stopped short of a full lockdown to retain some economic activity.
Reuters A worker disinfects Kilic Ali Pasha Mosque in Istanbul, Turkey, where authoritie­s have stopped short of a full lockdown to retain some economic activity.

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