By Libby George
LONDON (Reuters) – Recent political events in Turkey stymied the country’s path to slowing inflation and the fallout affected the economy as well as foreign exchange reserves, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development’s chief economist said.
The detention of Istanbul mayor and main opposition leader Ekrem Imamoglu on March 19 sent the lira sharply lower and triggered market turmoil that pushed the central bank into a surprise interest rate hike in April, short circuiting an easing cycle that began at the start of the year.
Turkey had been on a “slow but steady” path towards reducing inflation before the event, EBRD Chief Economist Beata Javorcik told Reuters.
“This path allowed it to cut interest rates, but that process was stopped by the recent political events, which brought turbulence and forced the central bank to reverse the direction,” Javorcik said, adding raising interest rates put the brakes on the economy.
“This is costly in terms of economic performance, in terms of reserves … and in terms of the reputational implications, undermining confidence of investors.”
Turkey has struggled with very high inflation in recent years, which peaked at 75% last May.
The bank downgraded its forecast for Turkey’s economic growth this year by 0.2 percentage points to 2.8%, due to lower domestic and external demand and tighter-than-expected monetary policy.
Turkey’s bonds and stock market had become a big draw for global money managers in the months leading up to Imamoglu’s detention. The appointment of Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek in 2023, widely seen as the architect of the government’s return to a more orthodox economic policy, helped lure investors.
The EBRD said Turkey’s central bank sold more than $40 billion in foreign exchange in the weeks following Imamoglu’s arrest, pulling net reserves, excluding swaps, from more than $60 billion to less than $20 billion.
The latest reserve numbers, published on Monday, showed that Turkey’s gross reserves had risen by $6 billion – the first such gain in nearly two months.
(This story has been corrected to fix the downward revision in growth forecast to 0.2 percentage points in paragraph 7)
(Reporting by Libby George, writing by Karin Strohecker, editing by Sharon Singleton)
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