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Turkish finance minister hopes for single-digit inflation by mid-2023

January 16, 2022 at 12:39 pm

A vendor wheels a cart past an advertisement showing Turkish lira banknotes on Istiklal Street in Istanbul, Turkey, on Monday, December 20, 2021 [Moe Zoyari/Bloomberg via Getty Images]

Turkey’s annual inflation rate will be in single digits by the time presidential and parliamentary elections set for mid-2023 are held, Finance Minister Nureddin Nebati said on Saturday, reported Reuters.

Inflation hit a 19-year high of 36% in December after the central bank slashed interest rates under pressure from President Tayyip Erdogan, causing a currency crisis that led to the lira shedding 44% of its value in 2021.

Speaking to heads of non-governmental organisations in Istanbul, Nebati said Turkey’s only problem now was high inflation, and the volatility in the lira’s exchange rate had settled.

“With fiscal policies and the steps that we will take, we will enter the elections… next year with single-digit inflation,” Nebati said.

“We will all experience, see the change after the first quarter (of 2022),” he said about inflation.

Despite government officials’ promises of bringing inflation down quickly, economic analysts say it could exceed 50% in the coming months and remain elevated through the year.

The currency crisis was halted last month, thanks in part to costly currency interventions and to government incentives to reduce the dollar’s appeal to savers.

Read: ‘Keep savings in Turkish lira in 2022 despite volatility,’ Erdogan says to citizens

Turks snatched up hard currencies as the lira sank to record lows against the dollar, and Turkish locals’ forex and gold holdings hit a record high of $238.97 billion in December before they declined slightly to $234.3 billion by January 7.

Nebati said on Saturday the conversion of forex holdings to Turkish lira will accelerate in the coming weeks.

“The decline in forex deposit accounts has begun. We will see the declining trend in the forex deposit accounts continuing downward quickly,” he said, adding that the central bank’s reserves will rise as well.

Nebati said that as of Friday night more than 131 billion lira ($9.69 billion) had been deposited in accounts under the government scheme that protects lira deposits from forex depreciation.

Speaking in the western province of Aydin, Erdogan said the lira protection scheme had spoiled foreign economic “attacks.”

“In the last few years, they specifically targeted our economy. They made countless efforts to create an economic crisis followed by political and social chaos,” he said.

Erdogan said Turkey was aiming for $35 billion in tourism revenues this year, and $250 billion in exports.

Read: Turkey’s Erdogan says he lowered inflation to 4% before, can do again