Gulf News

Erdogan has confused politics with economics

With the lira in free fall, few would have guessed Turkey’s economic growth was so thinly rooted

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Right now, Turkey’s economy is in free fall — a crisis that has been precipitat­ed by the near collapse of its lira against the US dollar and the euro. The decline in value has been spurred by growing concerns over the general economic direction and policies adopted by the government and directed by its president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, as well as a deepening standoff with the United States and deteriorat­ing ties with Washington.

From a political perspectiv­e alone, the worsening relations between Ankara and Washington are not what would be normally expected between two members of Nato, and there appears to be little leeway for compromise right now between a leader determined to forge his own path for his nation, and one determined to make his nation great again — whether that leader be in either capital. But the manner and speed in which Turkey’s economy has deteriorat­ed certainly sends warning signs that there seems to be something fundamenta­lly amiss. For his first decade as prime minister, Turkey’s economic growth had been spectacula­r, held up as a prime example of an emerging economy, one that developed close ties with the neighbouri­ng European Union, had won customs concession­s from Brussels, with a lending policy that facilitate­d growth and spurred developmen­t.

Most recently, however, the imposition of tariffs from Washington and the threat of further sanctions in a deepening political rift, has resulted in the lira’s swift and spectacula­r decline. Inflation is running at 15 per cent, spurred by a currency that is becoming decreasing­ly debased. Normally, in mature economies with a political leadership that is responsibl­e and responsive, the necessary course of corrective action would be to lessen the money in circulatio­n and decrease any new supply by hiking interest rates. In Ankara, where political power has been self-centred on Erdogan, those corrective measures do not suit his personal economic management style — and the lira continues to fall as inflation increases. This cannot be sustained in the long term — the commoditie­s that Turkey will need for its plants and factories will become too expensive. The president is loathe to veer from his path of excessive borrowing and low interest rates.

Given the events of these past weeks, few would have imagined that Turkey’s vaunted economic strength was indeed so thinly rooted and fragile. It certainly doesn’t inspire confidence now to hear Erdogan urging Turks to check under their mattress and trade their gold, euros and dollars for the lira. It will take more than that to ease this huge crisis.

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