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Turkish inflation continues to rise, testing Erdogan’s patience with his U-turn.

By Nevzat Devranoglu and Orhan Coskun

ANKARA (Reuters) – Turks will get little reprieve from a soaring cost of living this summer ⁢as economists expect prices to jump by as much as 8.5% in August, ​underlining Ankara’s challenge as it embarks on ‍a painful ​path toward more‍ orthodox policies.

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The sustained inflationary ⁤pressure, driven by a lira​ drop and tax hikes, comes as President Tayyip Erdogan’s new finance minister and central bank chief orchestrate a policy U-turn including interest rate hikes that are expected to slow ⁢domestic demand.

The ‌monetary tightening – after years of aggressive‌ rate ⁤cuts – ​is meant ​to cool inflation by mid-2024. ​But in the meantime the U-turn​ has hammered the currency and left authorities asking already-stretched households for patience.

In July, consumer prices soared ⁢nearly 10%‍ sequentially due to ⁤tax hikes and a ⁣lira crash. This month, forecasts by five economists show⁢ them rising between 5.5% and 8.5%, with fallout from⁣ mid-July ‌tax hikes lagging into August.

The economists told Reuters that food prices would jump this month due to a July 16 fuel tax⁤ hike, which was meant to help fund a 1.12 trillion lira ($42.2 billion) rise in the budget after February’s earthquakes and May elections‌ boosted ⁢spending.

The tax rise ⁢sent petrol‌ prices up 45% to 36 lira per litre. ⁣Separately this week, public transportation and taxi fares were raised​ by 51% in Istanbul, Turkey’s ⁢largest city, with short-distance taxi fares up 75%.

Erdogan’s​ previous drive to slash interest rates ⁣sent annual​ inflation soaring ⁤to a 25-year high above 85% last year and left⁣ the lira heavily ⁣state managed.

Yet after he was re-elected in May, Erdogan, facing an unstable economy and depleted reserves, named a new cabinet to reverse policy. ‍The ⁤central bank under new Governor Hafize ⁢Gaye Erkan has since hiked⁤ rates ‍by 900 basis points⁤ and the lira, freer to float, ‍has ⁤plunged 26%.

ERDOGAN’S SUPPORT

Despite​ Erdogan’s ⁤outspoken opposition to high rates‌ in the past, Erkan has vowed to⁢ continue her gradual tightening.

Yet⁣ partly due to currency depreciation, the u-turn/” title=”Turkish inflation continues to rise, testing Erdogan’s patience with his U-turn.”>central ⁢bank expects annual inflation to⁣ rise until the second ⁣quarter ⁢of 2024 when it peaks above 60%, spelling more cost-of-living ⁤strains for Turks.

Erdogan publicly backs ​the ​goal of lowering inflation to single digits but said‍ on Monday ⁣the government⁢ will at the same time “never compromise”⁣ on employment and economic growth.

Some analysts have ​questioned how far he will allow rates to rise and growth to slow,⁤ especially given nationwide‍ local elections set for March, prompting Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek to‌ stress that ⁣he⁣ has ​Erdogan’s full support.

A Turkish official ​familiar with the matter said the gradual tightening aimed ⁣to​ preserve growth and avoid shocks to employment⁤ and the economy.

Moody’s said it could raise Turkey’s credit ratings if ⁢the shift to orthodoxy is sustained. Yet because it will ⁢slow‌ growth, ⁤it said ‍the “key challenge ‍is ⁤to balance the need for decisive ⁣action…with the political imperative for continued robust economic growth.”

BETTER DATA

Since Simsek and Erkan‍ took the reins​ two months ago, economists say the Turkish Statistical Institute (TUIK) has⁣ published data with higher-quality price measurements.

The 9.5% monthly ‌inflation ​reading ⁢in July “fully reflected ⁢the tax and fuel changes, ‌marking a clear difference between the quality of June⁢ and July readings compared to those at the start ⁢of the year,” said ‍an economist who requested ​anonymity due to the sensitivity of the issue.

Since 2018,⁤ some economists and opposition politicians have​ criticised TUIK’s data on grounds it did not match street prices.

After‍ years‌ of divergence with‍ market expectations, the central bank‌ matched those last month when it raised its‍ end-2023⁢ annual inflation forecast to ​58.0% from a previous 22.3%.

(Writing by Daren Butler; Editing by Jonathan⁣ Spicer and Toby Chopra)

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