Erdoğan's Economic Reckoning

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Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s victory lap following his re-election last month will be short, because his country is on the verge of economic meltdown

Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
Photo: © Depositphotos/palinchak

Turkey’s economy was also in crisis when Erdoğan’s Justice and Development Party (AKP) first came to power, in 2002. Back then, Turks overwhelmingly wanted to join the European Union, so the AKP’s government, which Erdoğan led from 2003 until 2014, when he became president, implemented economic reforms and applied for membership.

By 2010, those reforms were working as intended. Per capita income had tripled, leading the World Bank to classify Turkey as an upper-middle-income country. The inflation rate had fallen to single digits from a peak of over 100%, even as the economy grew rapidly. But despite this progress, EU accession negotiations had stalled. With the prospect of membership fading fast, Erdoğan began to turn his back on Europe. His new political strategy was to appeal to the religiosity of rural Turks, a move that entailed a shift from technocratic competence to authoritarian populism.

With a population of 85 million and a geopolitical neighborhood that includes the European Union, Russia, and the Middle East, Erdoğan was always going to have to play a complicated diplomatic game. After failing to secure a wish list of fighter planes and other weaponry from the United States, he bought arms from Russia instead. Last year, he helped broker a deal with Russia to allow grain shipments from Ukrainian ports, and he continues to block Sweden’s entry into NATO, citing the refuge Sweden is providing to individuals tied to the Kurdistan Workers’ Party.

The turn away from the EU is perhaps most discernible in Erdoğan’s economic policies, which have become increasingly unorthodox and erratic. To finance ambitious infrastructure projects – including a third bridge across the Bosporus, a new canal, a new airport, and a presidential palace with more than a thousand rooms – he relied increasingly on capital inflows to offset Turkey’s growing current-account deficits. Then, as inflation rose, he insisted that interest rates should be lowered – the exact opposite of central banks’ standard practice (not to mention economic common sense). Not surprisingly, this caused the lira’s exchange rate to plummet, which Erdoğan hoped would encourage export growth. Finally, after five years of lira depreciation, he tried to halt the slide in an unsuccessful effort to offset inflation.

By the beginning of 2022, Turkey’s economic situation was already dire. Inflation had increased toward triple digits, the exchange rate had become seriously overvalued, and the current-account deficit was rising fast – all owing to what The Economist called Erdoğan’s “voodoo economics.”

Pressing his belief that inflation could be tamed with interest-rate reductions, he has cycled through four central-bank governors in as many years. At his direction, special measures were implemented to attract foreign capital with which to finance his ambitious spending programs. Among these was a public commitment that Turks who held bank deposits in lira would be compensated for any depreciation greater than the rate of interest. By early 2023, such deposits amounted to an estimated $125 billion – around one-seventh of Turkey’s 2022 GDP.

As if this looming expense was not burdensome enough, the government also rolled out a host of ill-advised policies ahead of May’s presidential election. Public spending was increased, and the minimum wage was raised by 55%. Turks received a month’s worth of free gas, and much more. Not surprisingly, inflation reached an annualized rate of almost 100%, and basic consumer goods – such as (subsidized) bread – are reportedly in short supply.

Then there was the 7.8-magnitude earthquake in southeastern Turkey in early February, which killed more than 55,000 people and destroyed housing, roads, and other infrastructure on an enormous scale. The resources needed for recovery and reconstruction would have strained even a government whose finances were in order.

In fact, the only reason the Turkish economy was not already in a full-scale crisis long before the election is that Erdoğan managed to secure financial support from other countries, most notably Saudi Arabia. By leveraging Turkey’s geopolitical position, he was able to sustain his spending spree until Turks cast their ballots. But now that he has won another term, an economic reckoning looms. Unless other countries are willing to continue financing Turkey’s excessive government spending (and counterproductive interest-rate policies), he will need to undertake serious reforms. Otherwise, Turkey will lose access to international capital markets, and its economic outlook will become catastrophic.

Erdoğan has already appointed a new finance minister and central-bank governor, both of whom are highly respected. If the new administration undertakes a series of policy reforms – including raising interest rates sufficiently, allowing for lira depreciation, and adopting a realistic budget – it could still avoid a meltdown and shift to a more sustainable growth path. But success would entail painful adjustments.

Unless the new government addresses the underlying issues or obtains further financing from friendly countries, a crisis will become unavoidable. That would be yet another tragedy for Turkey, and yet another major challenge for Europe and the rest of the world to deal with.

© Project Syndicate 1995-2023 

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