ONE of the world’s worst inflation crises closed in further on another grim milestone in Turkey, and government efforts to help the population cope with the fallout only threaten to make it worse.
Price growth has been in the double digits almost without interruption since the start of 2017, but it exploded this year near a quarter-century high on the back of soaring energy and other commodity costs.
Data on Monday showed annual inflation accelerated for a 13th straight month to 78.6% in June, an uptick that was slightly less than forecast by economists. Further upward pressure came from energy prices, which soared 151.3% from a year earlier, while food inflation reached almost 94%.
“We observe typical spiraling inflation in Turkey now, as there is no anchor for price makers,” Deutsche Bank AG economists including Fatih Akcelik said in a report before the data release.
A combination of self-inflicted damage and price pressures from abroad have stirred up a storm in Turkey that the International Monetary Fund estimates will result in the world’s highest inflation this year after Venezuela, Sudan and Zimbabwe.
More details:
- A core inflation index, which strips out the impact from volatile items including food and energy, rose in June to an annual 57.3%, from 56% in the previous month
- Producer prices, an early indicator of inflation, have been growing by more than 100% for five straight months. They rose by an annual 138.3% in June
- Transportation prices saw the biggest annual increase in June, followed by food and non-alcoholic beverages and furnishings and household equipment
- In the country’s most populous city of Istanbul, retail inflation accelerated to an annual 94% in June.
The central bank, which just over two months ago predicted inflation could already start slowing as early as June, hasn’t raised policy interest rates in over a year after a round of monetary easing in late 2021, responding only with measures to cool off consumer lending.
Declines in the lira against the dollar continued in June, adding to this year’s worst performance in emerging markets that’s stoking inflation by making imported goods more expensive. The lira slightly weakened after the inflation report and was trading down 0.4% at 16.8163 per the dollar at 11:06 a.m. Istanbul.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan (picture), who believes lower borrowing costs should help bring down inflation, has acknowledged the “burden” on people from faster price gains.
Ahead of the elections scheduled for next June, his government on Friday announced an interim increase in the minimum wage for the first time in six years, raising pay by nearly 30%. Turkey already boosted its minimum wage by a record 50.5% in January.
Under the previous governor, the central bank had cautioned about a “positive shock” on inflation from increases in the nominal minimum wage. Its report last year found that headline price growth rises by one percentage point for each 10% increase in the minimum wage.
Erdogan has called for patience and said last week that inflation will slow to “reasonable” levels from February-March next year. – Bloomberg