Khaleej Times

Turkey’s growth outlook dim

- Ezgi Erkoyun and David Dolan

ankara — Turkey sharply cut its growth forecasts for this year and next on Thursday, but disappoint­ed investors who had hoped for a plan to help banks and a deeper reduction in the estimates to reflect the fragile state of the economy.

Turkey has seen its lira currency plunge by 40 per cent this year on concerns about President Tayyip Erdogan’s influence over monetary policy and a bitter diplomatic rift with the United States. The turbulence has shaken global financial markets and raised the prospect of a potential banking crisis at home.

Markets had been hoping that Finance Minister Berat Albayrak’s medium-term programme announced on Thursday would signal a clear break from the emphasis on credit-fuelled growth that has characteri­sed Turkey’s rapid expansion over the last decade and a half under Erdogan’s rule.

Albayrak said growth would be 3.8 per cent this year and 2.3 per cent in 2019, both revised down from forecasts of 5.5 per cent. He also did not deliver the big plans for the banking industry that some analysts had been hoping for, particular­ly, the creation of a “bad bank” vehicle to take over non-performing loans.

Following the presentati­on, the chairman of Turkey’s banking watchdog, BDDK, said that there would not be a transfer of problem loans to another institutio­n. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates