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    Turkiye hikes interest rate in Erdogan policy U-turn

    ISTANBUL (AFP) – Turkiye yesterday pivoted away from years of unconventional economics promoted by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan as the central bank nearly doubled its key interest rate to fight inflation and steady the troubled lira.

    The bank hiked the rate to 15 per cent from 8.5 per cent in its first meeting since Erdogan filled his government with investor-backed faces after winning tight May polls.

    It added that this was only the start of a process aimed at bringing Turkiye’s annual inflation rate of nearly 40 per cent to single figures “as soon as possible”.

    “Monetary tightening will be further strengthened as much as needed in a timely and gradual manner until a significant improvement in the inflation outlook is achieved,” the central bank said.

    The bank further promised to “simplify and improve” policies that past Erdogan governments used to try and weather Turkiye’s worst economic crisis since the 1990s.

    Fitch Ratings said it expected the policy rate to reach 25 per cent by the end of the year.

    But the lira lost 2.5 per cent of its value against the dollar due to investor disappointment that the bank had decided to pursue a more gradual rate-hiking course.

    “Not enough. They needed to front load hike,” BlueBay Asset Management economist Timothy Ash remarked.

    A man pulls a trolley with goods in a street market in Eminonu commercial district in Istanbul, Turkiye. PHOTO: AP

    “Further hikes are needed at the coming meetings to tackle Turkiye’s inflation problem,” Capital Economics emerging markets analyst Liam Peach added.

    Other analysts said new central bank chief Hafize Gaye Erkan wanted to avoid suffering the fate of past governors whom Erdogan had fired for quickly raising rates.

    Erdogan still defends his markets-defying idea that high interest rates contribute to – rather than cure – rising consumer prices that have been Turkiye’s bane for the past five years.

    The Turkish leader pushed the central bank to start slashing interest rates two years ago as part of a “new economic model” that focuses on job creation and economic growth.

    The policy badly backfired.

    The annual inflation rate reached 85 per cent late last year and the central bank burned through most of its reserves trying to prop up the lira – down 90 per cent against the dollar over 10 years – from even bigger falls.

    Erdogan was forced into his first election runoff and then orchestrated one of his trademark policy reversals after extending his two-decade rule until 2028.

    He appointed respected economist Mehmet Simsek as finance minister and former Goldman Sachs director Erkan as the head of the nominally independent central bank.

    Turkish media said Simsek agreed to join the government only after winning assurances that he would be free to steady the ship as he saw fit.

    Simsek’s presence has already made an impact.

    The lira has lost an additional 17 per cent against the dollar since the May 28 election runoff – a sign that the central bank is slowly unwinding its costly currency defence.

    Simsek and newly appointed vice president Cevdet Yilmaz jetted to petrodollar-rich Abu Dhabi yesterday to drum up new investments and loans.

    But investors who initially cheered Erdogan’s new appointments now worry about how long the Turkish leader’s patience with his new team will last.

    Many point to the grim experience of Naci Agbal – a market-friendly central banker whom Erdogan fired four months into his attempts to raise rates in late 2020 and early 2021.

    “The scale of the rate hike was lower than the average market expectation of an increase to between 17-20 per cent,” Verisk Maplecroft risk consultancy analyst Hamish Kinnear said.

    “This is a sign that the new governor is looking to tread carefully to avoid a clash with President Erdogan.”

    One of Turkiye’s most costly programmes involves a bank deposit protection scheme that Erdogan rolled out in late 2021.

    It commits the government to cover any losses lira deposits incur from the currency’s depreciation against the dollar.

    That means that a quick return to a free-floating exchange rate could put an even bigger burden on the strained budget.

    Many expect Simsek to gradually phase out the scheme.

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