Turkey’s annual inflation jumps to almost 79%, reaches highest level in 24 years
Soaring consumer prices have hit the population of 84 million hard


Inflation in Turkey rose close to 79% last month, the highest the country has seen in a quarter of a century.
The annual inflation rate was 78.62% for June, according to the Turkish Statistical Institute, surpassing forecasts. That’s the country’s highest annual inflation reading in 24 years. The monthly increase was 4.95%.
Soaring consumer prices have hit the population of 84 million hard, with little hope for improvement in the near term as a result of the Russia-Ukraine war, high energy and food prices, and a sharply depreciated lira, the national currency.
Transportation prices jumped 123.37% from the previous year, and food and non-alcoholic beverage prices climbed 93.93%, according to government data.
Turkey has enjoyed rapid growth in previous years, but President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has for the last few years refused to meaningfully raise rates to cool the resulting inflation, describing interest rates as the “mother of all evil.” The result has been a plummeting Turkish lira and far less spending power for the average Turk.
Erdogan instructed the country’s central bank — which analysts say has no independence from him — to repeatedly slash borrowing rates in 2020 and 2021, even as inflation continued to rise. Central bank chiefs who expressed opposition to this course of action were fired; by the spring of 2021, Turkey’s central bank had seen four different governors in two years.
The country’s interest rate was gradually reduced to 14% last fall and has remained unchanged since. The lira fell 44% against the dollar last year, and is down 21% against the greenback since the start of this year.
Turkey’s government has introduced unorthodox policies to try to shore up the lira without raising interest rates. In late June, Turkey’s banking regulator announced a ban on lira loans to companies holding what it deemed to be too much foreign currency, which boosted the currency briefly but caused more uncertainty among investors who questioned the sustainability of the measure.
SOURCE: CNBC

Gold prices increase significantly in Pakistan
- 8 hours ago

Muslim world to face music, if not united: Khawaja Asif
- 10 hours ago

Dodgers desperately need Shohei Ohtani's arm, but his bat will do -- for now
- 6 hours ago

Iran confirms limited damage at Iran’s Fordow nuclear site, atomic body says
- 8 hours ago

Sindh to build rest house worth Rs197mn for judges
- 9 hours ago

Around 60 people, including 20 children, martyred in Israeli attack on Tehran: Iran’s state media
- 9 hours ago

Khamenei appoints Maj Gen Amir Hatami Iran's new army chief
- 7 hours ago

Magnitude of 4.9 quake jolts Gwadar, suburban areas
- 2 hours ago

Iran downs Israeli reconnaissance drones
- 8 hours ago

South Africa thrash Australia by five wickets to win World Test Championship
- 5 hours ago

Brigadier General Seyyed Majid Mousavi appointed new commander of IRGC Aerospace Force
- 8 hours ago

Israel military says ‘currently’ launching attacks on several sites in Iran
- 2 hours ago