东南网首页 | 繁体 | 设为首页 | 加入收藏
aa
您所在的位置: 海外频道> 今日世界> 正文

News Analysis: Türkiye's stubborn inflation fuels calls for further rate hikes

2024-03-13 17:22 来源:Xinhua 责任编辑:王勇

People withdraw money from ATMs in Ankara, Türkiye, on March 12, 2024. As inflation is soaring in Türkiye, the central bank's decision to halt monetary tightening is called into question while policymakers ask for patience, saying prices will drop this year. (Photo by Mustafa Kaya/Xinhua)

by Burak Akinci

ANKARA, March 12 (Xinhua) -- As inflation is soaring in Türkiye, the central bank's decision to halt monetary tightening is called into question while policymakers ask for patience, saying prices will drop this year.

Official data released on March 4 showed Türkiye's annual inflation rate climbed to 67.07 percent in February, exceeding market expectations, amid substantial rises in prices of food items ahead of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

The strong figures fuel concerns that Türkiye's central bank, which indicated in January that its months-long rate-hiking cycle was over, may have to return to tightening.

Following a policy reversal in mid-2023, the bank has hiked interest rates by 3,650 basis points. It said the current 45 percent policy rate is sufficient to bring inflation down.

Some economists and banks have expressed a growing prospect of more policy steps to cool inflation after municipal elections on March 31, given the price pressure and strong domestic demand.

It could lead to additional economic hardships for citizens grappling with soaring prices.

Senol Babuscu, professor of finance from Ankara's Baskent University, said the bank's rate hike policy was too sluggish at the beginning to curb the runaway inflation.

"Rates should be hiked by thousands of basis points at the start of the cycle, like a shock treatment; they remained insufficient to fight high inflation," he told Xinhua.

In his view, the bank will have to hike rates following local elections by "at least 500 basis points" in April to try to reach its forecasts.

The central bank, which has maintained its year-end inflation forecast at 36 percent, has not shut the door to tightening "in case of a significant and persistent deterioration in the inflation outlook."

Rates were kept unchanged at the bank's last meeting in late February.

Babuscu said the year-end inflation target will not be met. "I expect at least 50 percent inflation at the end of the year," the analyst said.

He argued that the Ankara government may have to call in an International Monetary Fund-supported economic adjustment program to address financial woes.

Like Babuscu, leading U.S. bank JPMorgan said last week that it expects the Turkish central bank to raise its key policy rate by 500 basis points to 50 percent in April due to the price pressure and strong domestic demand.

Mustafa Sonmez, a Turkish economist and writer, also stressed that the central bank may need to address surging inflation with new interest rates.

"The bank will possibly decide on a fresh rate increase after the (municipal) elections," he told Xinhua, stressing that a belated rate hike will only exacerbate the stubborn inflation and that backdoor measures won't work.

He referred to two separate announcements by the central bank last week. The monetary institution said it would use alternative policy-tightening measures, such as reducing the monthly growth limit on local-currency loans.

Türkiye's Treasury and Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek acknowledged high inflation data but said, "The central bank considers that it has made sufficient tightening."

"We have to be patient and committed going forward," Simsek said on the weekend, adding the government's disinflation strategy is still in the early stages. "Achieving price stability takes time," the minister stressed.

On the other hand, some experts have argued that Türkiye's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan may return to his former loose monetary policy following the elections in which his ruling party seeks to reclaim big cities from the opposition.

Long opposed to rate increases, the Turkish leader appointed a new economic team after his reelection last year amid a deepening cost-of-living crisis, which led to a policy overhaul and monetary tightening.

"A first-rate cut might intervene before the autumn. The central bank will not oppose the president's monetary vision," Emre Alkin, an Istanbul-based economist and scholar, argued in his blog.

Meanwhile, on the back of economic anxiety, the Turkish currency on Monday hit an all-time low of 32 liras against the U.S. dollar.

The Turkish lira declined almost 8 percent this year, following a 37 percent decline in 2023. The weakening currency amplifies huge import costs, further fueling inflation in Türkiye.

A customer exchanges money at a foreign exchange office in Ankara, Türkiye, on March 12, 2024. As inflation is soaring in Türkiye, the central bank's decision to halt monetary tightening is called into question while policymakers ask for patience, saying prices will drop this year. (Photo by Mustafa Kaya/Xinhua)

People wait to exchange money at a foreign exchange office in Ankara, Türkiye, on March 12, 2024. As inflation is soaring in Türkiye, the central bank's decision to halt monetary tightening is called into question while policymakers ask for patience, saying prices will drop this year. (Photo by Mustafa Kaya/Xinhua)

People walk past Türkiye's central bank in Ankara, Türkiye, on March 12, 2024. As inflation is soaring in Türkiye, the central bank's decision to halt monetary tightening is called into question while policymakers ask for patience, saying prices will drop this year. (Photo by Mustafa Kaya/Xinhua)

A teller counts banknotes at a foreign exchange office in Ankara, Türkiye, on March 12, 2024. As inflation is soaring in Türkiye, the central bank's decision to halt monetary tightening is called into question while policymakers ask for patience, saying prices will drop this year. (Photo by Mustafa Kaya/Xinhua)

推荐阅读
东南网全球站点
FJSEN Global Sites
东南网美国站
东南网澳大利亚站
东南网香港站
东南网菲律宾站
东南网阿根廷站
东南网马来西亚站
东南网日本站
东南网新西兰站
东南网英国站
关注我们
Follow Us
联系我们
Contact Us
东南网海外频道联系电话、传真:0591-83729159
福建省福州市华林路84号福建日报大厦4楼
合作媒体
Associated Media
闽ICP备案号(闽ICP备05022042号)
网络出版服务许可证 (署)网出证(闽)字第018号
信息网络传播视听节目许可 许可证号:1310572
广播电视节目制作经营许可证(闽)字第085号
增值电信业务经营许可证 闽B2-20100029
福建日报报业集团拥有东南网采编人员所创作作品之版权,
未经报业集团书面授权,不得转载、摘编或以其他方式使用和传播