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Turkey to tackle inflation, follow free market rules - VP

Published 06/15/2023, 08:24 AM
Updated 06/15/2023, 08:33 AM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: People shop at an open market in Istanbul, Turkey, December 5, 2022. REUTERS/Dilara Senkaya/File Photo

By Nevzat Devranoglu

ANKARA (Reuters) -Turkey will take steps to lower inflation and will follow free market rules as it acts to raise competitiveness and productivity, Vice President Cevdet Yilmaz said on Thursday after chairing a meeting of a key economic coordination board.

Since his election victory last month, President Tayyip Erdogan has appointed a new finance minister and central bank governor who are expected to pivot to a more orthodox policy after years of rate cuts that fueled a cost-of-living crisis.

In what were among the first remarks from the government's economic team setting out its policies, Yilmaz said Ankara would maintain fiscal discipline and would implement a consistent set of policies.

"We will take effective and determined steps in the fight against inflation, which we see as the main problem," Yilmaz said in closing remarks at the board meeting in the presidential palace.

Inflation touched a 24-year high of 85.5% last October and dropped to just below 40% in May. In comments this week, Erdogan said he was determined to lower inflation to single digits under a "low inflation, low interest rate" policy.

"Within the free market rules, we will continue to take steps to increase the competitiveness and efficiency of our economy," Yilmaz said after Thursday's meeting.

Erdogan had said in comments released on Wednesday that new Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek will take steps swiftly with the central bank, despite the president maintaining his own unorthodox view that high interest rates cause inflation.

Analysts at leading investment banks now expect Turkey's central bank to start ramping up rates at its monetary policy committee meeting on June 22.

Erdogan has pursued unorthodox policies for years, aiming to flip the current account deficits to a surplus. But rate cuts carried out despite high inflation sparked a currency crisis in 2021 and the lira has continued to slide since then.

The lira was 0.4% weaker at 23.66 against the dollar on Thursday, near a record low, after weakening more than 20% so far this year.

Yilmaz said the government would work towards achieving its investment, employment, production and export targets and was determined to remove the current account deficit from being an obstacle to sustainable growth.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: People shop at an open market in Istanbul, Turkey, December 5, 2022. REUTERS/Dilara Senkaya/File Photo

The current account deficit widened to $5.4 billion in April and is expected to amount to more than $45 billion this year.

Yilmaz said the government's medium-term economic plan, which would be shared with the public in September, will reshape public policies and practices.

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