Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Growth, inflation and reforms: All but calm March awaits Turkey

The nation’s economy outperform­ed its peers in the fourth quarter and 2020 overall, data will likely show today, while separate informatio­n this week is expected to reveal inflation surged again in February to over 15%

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THE MEDIAN of 20 forecasts in a Bloomberg survey was for a 6.9% year-on-year growth in the fourth quarter, more than in any other G-20 nation, including China.

“The key drivers of the economic activity in the last quarter were industrial production and credit growth,” Can Ayan, an Istanbul-based economist at Aktif Bank, was cited as saying by Bloomberg yesterday.

Last year, the government had forecast GDP growth of 0.3%. The country’s performanc­e prompted a number of internatio­nal financial institutio­ns, including the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF), Wall Street banks JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs, Bank of America (BofA), British banking giant HSBC and Moody’s to revise upward their growth forecasts for the economy.

The IMF forecasted expansions in only Turkey, China and Egypt in 2020 due to the pandemic fallout, based on its January World Economic Outlook Update.

The major emerging market (EM) economy expanded 4.5% year-on-year in the first quarter when social and business curbs were imposed, leading to a 9.9% contractio­n in the second. It rebounded 6.7% in the third quarter as state banks offered cheap credit and as restrictio­ns were lifted.

For 2021, the GDP is estimated to grow by as much as 6% as the economy continues to rebound.

Consumptio­n and government spending will support activity in the first quarter of 2021, lifting growth over the year to 5.2%, Ayan told Bloomberg.

The IMF raised its growth forecast for the economy to 6% in 2021, compared with a previous projection of 5%.

Faced with a second COVID-19 wave, the government imposed new measures at the end of last year but sought to free up supply and production chains. Ankara is considerin­g lifting some restrictio­ns as of this week.

INFLATION TO EXCEED 15%

Following the GDP data, eyes will turn on the annual inflation data due Wednesday, which is expected to have risen again in February.

Inflation is expected to have risen to more than 15% last month, polls showed on Friday, as fruit and vegetable prices continue to exert upward pressure.

In a Reuters poll of 16 economists, the median estimate for annual consumer price inflation in February was 15.39%, with forecasts ranging between 15.1% and 15.7%. It edged higher to stand at 14.97% in January.

The median for the month-on-month rise was 0.7%, with forecasts ranging between 0.5% and 1%.

The median estimate in the Anadolu Agency (AA) survey was for an increase to 15.45% in the month.

Inflation is expected to peak at around 16% in April before falling gradually, said Serkan Gönençler, an economist at Gedik Yatırım, adding that a continuati­on of the recent weakness in the lira could add upside pressure.

“The food group with its increased weight in the basket, especially fruit and vegetable prices, could exert upside pressure on February inflation,” Gönençler told Reuters.

“A policy rate hike could still come on the agenda if the recent lira weakening continues and negatively impacts the inflation path. We continue to think that the central bank could consider rate cuts in Q3 after a fall in the inflation print.”

The Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey (CBRT), which has repeatedly said it would target inflation more strongly under

new Governor Naci Ağbal, has raised its policy rate by 675 basis points to 17% since November. The benchmark rate was held steady in January and February meetings.

The central bank expects inflation to come down to 9.4% by the end of 2021. However, it said changes of weightings in the inflation basket will have an upside impact on annual inflation until mid-2021.

The central bank said the changes were projected to increase inflation by 0.5 points by April, then die out toward the end of the year.

FEBRUARY EXPORT FIGURES

Among others, Trade Minister Ruhsar Pekcan is expected to unveil the country’s export figures for February.

Due tomorrow, the data follows the

highest monthly figure in January as sales surpassed $15 billion, a 2.5% year-onyear increase. Imports were down 5.6% to amount to $18.1 billion.

The foreign trade deficit ended up shrinking 32% on annual basis to over $3 billion.

The outbreak led to a 6.26% drop in 2020 exports as Turkey closed the year with $169.5 billion in foreign sales, exceeding the target of $165.9 billion in the mediumterm program.

Imports were up 4.3% to reach $219.4 billion. The trade deficit widened by 69.12% to $49.9 billion last year.

EYES ON ECONOMIC REFORMS

A week later, attention will turn toward Ankara as the government will be unveiling details of the highly anticipate­d new economic reform policies.

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan last week confirmed the reform package

would be announced in the second week of March.

Erdoğan also said a human rights action plan would be announced tomorrow.

“We have come to the end of our economic reform work, which includes macroecono­mic stability policies and structural policies,” Treasury and Finance Minister Lütfi Elvan said last Thursday.

Erdoğan late last year pledged a new economic era and promised a slate of economic and judicial reforms, which he said would raise the standards for democratic rights and freedom.

Economic reforms are expected to focus on investment, production, export and employment.

Elvan had said Turkey would maintain fiscal discipline and would focus on sustainabl­e and “high quality” economic growth policies in the coming period to increase employment.

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 ??  ?? People wearing protective masks stroll by the Bosporus amid the COVID-19 outbreak in Istanbul, Turkey, Feb. 25, 2021.
People wearing protective masks stroll by the Bosporus amid the COVID-19 outbreak in Istanbul, Turkey, Feb. 25, 2021.

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