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News ID: 102235
Publish Date : 06 May 2022 - 22:01

Turkey’s Inflation Hits Two-Decade High of 70%

LONDON (Al-Jazeera) - Turkey’s official inflation rate has spiralled to nearly 70 percent in April, posing a huge challenge to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, whose unconventional economic policies are often blamed for the economic turmoil.
The consumer price index rose by 69.97 percent year-on-year in April compared with 61.14 percent in March, the national statistics agency said on Thursday.
Erdogan insists that sharp cuts in interest rates are needed to bring down soaring consumer prices, flying in the face of economic orthodoxy.
The collapse of the lira has pushed up the cost of energy imports and foreign investors are now turning away from the once-promising emerging market.
Ukraine war and the coronavirus pandemic have exacerbated the energy price spikes and production bottlenecks.
Analysts say Turkey’s annual inflation rate, the highest since Erdogan’s ruling AK Party stormed to power in 2002, is largely linked to his unconventional economic thinking.
Erdogan has put pressure on the nominally independent central bank to start slashing interest rates.
In April, the bank kept its benchmark interest rate steady for the fourth consecutive month, bowing to pressure despite high inflation.
The biggest price increases in April were in the transport sector, standing at 105.9 percent, while the prices of food and non-alcoholic drinks jumped 89.1 percent.
Treasury and finance minister Nureddin Nebati has brushed aside concerns, saying that the current inflationary trend was fleeting and would “not spread over the long term and be permanent”.
Turkey has cut taxes on some goods and offered subsidies for some electricity bills for vulnerable households but even this has failed to stem inflation.
The Turkish currency has lost 44 percent of its value against the dollar last year and more than 11 percent since the start of January.
Erdogan’s government has responded by using state banks to buy up liras in a bid to cut the currency’s losses.
There is also speculation that the central bank sells dollars through back channels to stem the lira’s slide.
“The central bank sells $2.5-3bn a week through public banks,” a former manager in Turkey’s state-owned bank Ziraat was quoted as saying this week.
He was sharing privileged information he received from banking circles, Turkish media reported.
Erdogan, who faces a crucial presidential vote next year, has also shifted policy to mend broken alliances with cash-rich Gulf states to draw financial support.