Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Current account balance sees $1.8B surplus in September

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THE Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey (CBRT) announced yesterday that Turkey’s current account balance produced a surplus in September totaling $1.83 billion for the second consecutiv­e month this year, improving from last year’s deficit of $4.4 billion.

TURKEY’S current account balance showed a surplus in September for the second consecutiv­e month this year, the Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey (CBRT) announced yesterday.

According to the CBRT’s balance of payments report, the country’s current account surplus totaled $1.83 billion in September, improving from last year’s deficit of $4.4 billion.

In the previous month, the balance posted a surplus for the first time over the past three years with surplus of $1.86 billion.

Monday’s figures also met expectatio­ns, as an Anadolu Agency survey on Friday showed that a group of 19 economists had forecast a surplus of $1.97 billion on average.

“Gold and energy excluded cur- rent account indicated a $5.07 billion surplus, in contrast to $588 million deficit observed in the same month of 2017,” the central bank said.

“In this month, goods deficit decreased by $5.9 billion compared to the same month of 2017, realizing as $825 million,” the bank said. “And primary income deficit decreased by $127 million to $938 million.”

“Services item recorded a net inflow of $3.5 billion increasing by $358 million year-on-year, mainly stemming from $166 million net increase in travel revenues observing as $2.85 billion in September 2018,” it added.

The bank also reported that the 12-month rolling deficit fell to nearly $46 billion as of September, while the current account balance recorded a deficit of around $30 billion in January-September this year. The country’s year-end current account deficit will be $35.7 billion on average – ranging between $28.5 billion and $41 billion – according to the Anadolu Agency survey.

In 2017, Turkey’s annual current account deficit was some $47.5 billion – around 5.6 percent of the country’s GDP.

Over the last two decades, the country’s highest annual current account deficit was seen in 2011 with $74.4 billion.

The country’s New Economic Program (NEP), announced in September, is targeting a current-accountdef­icit-to-GDP ratio of 4.7 percent this year, 3.3 percent next year, 2.7 percent in 2020 and 2.6 percent in 2021.

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