's unorthodox views on interest rates are stated to be one of the most important causes of the crisis. By late-May, lenders were facing a surge in demand from companies seeking to reorganise debt repayments. By early-July, public restructuring requests by some of the country's biggest businesses alone already totalled $20,000,000,000 with other debtors not publicly listed or large enough to require disclosures. The
asset quality of Turkish banks, as well as their
capital adequacy ratio, kept deteriorating throughout the crisis. By June
Halk Bankası, the most vulnerable of the large lenders, had lost 63% of its US dollar value since last summer and traded at 40% of book value. However, it is hard to say that this is mainly due to the economic developments in Turkey since the valuation of Halkbank was largely affected by the rumors over the possible outcomes of the US investigation about the bank's stated help to Iran in evading US sanctions. Banks continuously heightened interest rates for business and consumer loans and
mortgage loan rates, towards 20% annually, thus curbing demand from businesses and consumers. With a corresponding growth in deposits, the gap between total deposits and total loans, which had been one of the highest in emerging markets, began to narrow. Nevertheless, this development has also led to incomplete or unoccupied housing and commercial real estate littering the outskirts of Turkey's major cities, as Erdoğan's policies had fuelled the construction sector, where many of his business allies are very active, to lead past economic growth. In the first half of 2018, unsold stock of new housing kept increasing, while increases in new home prices in Turkey were lagging consumer price inflation by more than 10 percentage points. While heavy portfolio capital outflows persisted, $883,000,000 in June, with official foreign exchange reserves declining by a $6,990,000,000 during June, the current account deficit started narrowing in June, due to the weakened exchange rate for the lira. This was perceived as a sign of getting balanced economy. Turkish Lira started recover its losses as of September 2018 and the current account deficit continued to shrink. As a consequence of the earlier
monetary policy of easy money, any newfound fragile short-term macroeconomic stability is based on higher interest rates, thus creating a recessionary effect for the Turkish economy. In mid-June, the
Washington Post carried the quote from a senior financial figure in Istanbul that "years of irresponsible policies have overheated the Turkish economy. High inflation rates and current account deficits are going to prove sticky. I think we are at the end of our rope."
Suicides In January 2018, a worker
self-immolated in front of
Parliament.. In February 2020, Adem Yarıcı, 42, who was unemployed for a long time, burnt himself infront of the office of the governor of Hatay, screaming "my children are hungry" on 7 February 2020; he later died. The Hatay governorship stated that he had received assistance from social services, and suffered from psychological problems.. In November 2019 four siblings were found dead in an apartment in
Fatih,
Istanbul, having committed suicide because they were unable to pay their bills. The price of electricity increased in 2019 around 57% and youth unemployment stood around 27%. The electricity bill for the apartment had not been paid for several months. A family of four including two children 9 and 5 years old was similarly found in
Antalya. A note left behind detailed the financial difficulties the family was experiencing. In mid-November
The Guardian reported that an anonymous benefactor had paid off some debts at local grocery stores in
Tuzla and left envelopes of cash on doorstops after the suicides.
Timeline of events (2018) • 12 February –
Yıldız Holding unexpectedly requested to restructure as much as $7,000,000,000 in loans. • 21 February – Cemil Ertem, senior economic adviser to President
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, published an opinion piece in the
Daily Sabah suggesting that the
IMF's policy advice for Turkey's central bank to raise short term interest rates should be ignored and that "not only Turkey, but all developing countries, should do the opposite of what the IMF preaches." • 5 April –
Mehmet Şimşek, the Deputy Prime Minister in charge of the economy, sought to resign due to disagreement with Erdoğan about the latter's interference with central bank policy; but was later convinced to withdraw his resignation. • 7 April –
Doğuş Holding applied to their banks for
debt restructuring. Doğuş' outstanding loans stood at the equivalent of 23,500,000,000 Turkish lira (£2,765,597,500) at the end of 2017; up 11% from the year before. • 18 April – Erdoğan announced that the upcoming
general election would be held on 24 June, eighteen months earlier than scheduled. • 14 and 15 May – In a televised interview with
Bloomberg and in a meeting with global money managers in
London, Erdoğan said that after the elections, he intended to take greater control of the economy, including
de facto control over monetary policy, and to implement lower interest rates; this caused "shock and disbelief" among investors about the central bank's ability to fight inflation and stabilise the lira. On the same day, the
Turkish Statistical Institute reported another slip in consumer confidence over the month of May, with all sub-indices decreasing. On 25 May 2018, it reported a sharp drop in confidence in Turkey's services, retail trade, and construction sectors over the month of May. Also on the same day, the
Central Bank of Turkey raised interest rates at an emergency meeting of its Monetary Policy Committee, bowing to pressure from financial markets. The central bank raised its late liquidity window rate by 300 basis points to 16.5%. Taken against the vociferous objections of Erdoğan, this step brought temporary relief for the lira exchange rate. • 28 May – Turkey's central bank announced an operational simplification of its monetary policy, effective 1 June, coming with the announcement of another interest rate hike. The one-week repo rate, at 8 percent—currently not used—is to be raised to 16.5 percent and become the future benchmark of monetary policy. The current benchmark late liquidity window rate, now at 16.5 percent, will be fixed at 150 basis points above the one-week repo rate, which would now be 18 percent. The lira somewhat firmed in response. • 30 May – The Turkish Statistical Institute reported economic confidence sliding steeply in May to a value of 93.5, the lowest level in 15 months, since the aftermath of the
2016 coup attempt. • 30 May – GAMA Holding sought to ease repayment terms for $1.5 billion of loans with creditors. • 30 May – Turkey's central bank released minutes of the crucial 23 May Monetary Policy Committee meeting, saying that "the tight stance in monetary policy will be maintained decisively until the inflation outlook displays a significant improvement and becomes consistent with the targets", the latter being 5 percent by law. has a history of accelerating loss of value relative to the
euro, breaching the mark of five lira per euro in early-2018 • 1 June – The Istanbul Chamber of Industry published its index of manufacturing in Turkey for the month of May, stating that with a sharp drop for the second consecutive month, manufacturing conditions deteriorated to the worst since 2009, elaborating that "inflationary pressures remained marked in May, cost burdens continued to rise in the manufacturing sector." • 4 June – Turkey's statistics institute reported the annual inflation rate for May as risen to 12.2 percent from 10.9 percent the previous month, just below a 14-year high of last November, while monthly inflation was 1.6 percent. • 6 June – At the
Borsa Istanbul, Turkey's main stock index BIST-100 dropped 1.5 percent to the lowest level in dollar terms since the
2008 financial crisis. • 7 June – Turkey's central bank at its regular Monetary Policy Committee meeting raised its benchmark repo rate by 125 basis points to 17.75 percent. The move beat market expectations, resulting in immediate gains for the lira, and the yield on the benchmark 10-year lira bond eased, after touching a record-high 15.41 percent on 6 June. • 10 June – Turkey's Automotive Manufacturers Association published data for the month of May, showing car sales sliding to the lowest level since 2014. Passenger car sales slumped by 13 percent when compared to May 2017, while sales of commercial vehicles dropped 19 percent. • 11 June – Turkey's central bank released financial data for April, with the account deficit widening by $1.7 billion to $5.4 billion. • 13 June – Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's senior economic adviser Cemil Ertem in an opinion piece in the
Daily Sabah said that the unorthodox idea that it would be wrong to see inflation as a monetary phenomenon, leading to a sharp slide in the value of the lira and of Turkey's benchmark 10-year lira bonds, with yields on the latter reaching a record-high of 16.25 percent. • 14 June – Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in a televised interview said that his government would "conduct an operation against" international credit ratings agency
Moody's Investors Service following elections on 24 June. The next day, the lira finished its worst week since 2008, tumbling 5.7 per cent relative to the dollar, while also hitting its worst weekend close ever at US$4.73/TRY. • 24 June – In the
Turkish general election, Erdoğan retained the office of president while his
Justice and Development Party (AKP) narrowly lost its majority in parliament but achieved such majority together with its alliance partner the
Nationalist Movement Party (MHP). The day after, the Turkish Industry and Business Association (TÜSİAD) urgently called for economic reforms. • 28 June – The Turkish Statistical Institute reported its economic confidence index dropping in June for the fifth straight month, with construction sector confidence leading the declines. was Turkey's biggest ever. On the same day, the Automotive Distributors Association said that sales of the commercial vehicles sank 44 percent in June from June 2017, while car sales fell 38 percent. • 5 July –
Bloomberg reported that Turkish and international banks were taking control of
Türk Telekom, Turkey's biggest telephone company, due to billions of dollars in unpaid debt. Creditors set up a special purpose vehicle to acquire the company as they try to resolve Turkey's biggest-ever debt default. The same day, Bereket Enerji group was reported seeking buyers for two power plants as it negotiates with banks to refinance $4 billion in debt. Same day, Erdoğan by presidential decree appropriated to himself the authority to appoint the central bank governor, his deputies and the monetary policy committee members. • 11 July – The lira dropped 2.5 percent to 4.82 per dollar, its weakest level since falling to an all-time low of 4.92 against the U.S. currency in May. The stock market in Istanbul dropped 5.2 percent to 91.290 points. Yields on government debt surged. The next day, the lira touched an all-time low of 4.98 lira for a US dollar. Two days later, the lira recorded its biggest weekly slump in almost a decade. The benchmark Borsa Istanbul 100 Index fell the most since the foiled coup in 2016, with the selloff dragging price-to-estimated earnings valuations to the lowest in more than nine years. The 10-year government bond yield surged almost 100 basis points this week. • 19 July – ÇEL-MER Çelik Endüstrisi, a leading Turkish steel producer also operating in the automobile sector, agriculture, white goods, machinery production and the defence industry, sought bankruptcy protection from the courts after it failed to repay its debts. • 20 July – Ozensan Taahhut, a large Turkish construction company which has carried out construction contracts for state housing authority TOKI, the Justice Ministry, the Health Ministry and various municipalities, filed for bankruptcy protection. • 24 July – The Central Bank of Turkey at a meeting of its Monetary Policy Committee unexpectedly left the benchmark interest rate for its lending unchanged at 17.75 percent despite the latest hike in inflation, leading to a selloff in the lira currency as well as in Turkey's dollar-denominated government bonds and in Turkey's stock market. In the words of Brad Bechtel, global head of foreign exchange at US investment bank
Jefferies, the central bank's decision to hold rates left Turkey as "the pariah of emerging markets". The same day, the Turkish lira heading for its longest streak of monthly losses since an International Monetary Fund bailout in 2001, the Banks Association of Turkey (TBB) drew up a framework of principles for restructuring loans that exceed 50 million lira: If lenders with exposure to at least 75 percent of the total owed agree, a committee of lenders should order measures such as changes to shareholder structure and management, asset sales, spinoffs and capital injections, resolving restructurings within 150 days. • 1 August – Due to the weakening lira, Turkey's state pipeline operator
BOTAŞ raised the price of natural gas used by electric power plants by 50 percent. BOTAŞ also raised natural gas prices for residential use. The same day, the energy regulation authority raised electricity prices for industrial and residential use. Also the same day, the Istanbul Chamber of Industry said in a monthly survey of manufacturers that producer price inflation in July accelerated to the highest pace in more than a decade, after already having accelerated to 23.7 percent in June due to the Erdoğan government stimulating economic growth with a series of measures ahead of elections on 24 June. • 3 August – The Turkish Statistical Institute reported that Turkey's annual inflation rate increased to 15.9 percent, from 15.4 percent in June, extending the highest level since 2003. Producer price inflation climbed to 25 percent from 23.7 percent in June. • 9 August – Late in the day, Erdoğan in a speech called upon supporters not to pay heed to "various campaigns under way against Turkey", adding: "If they have dollars, we have our people, our righteousness and our God." On the same day, Turkey's banking regulator placed comprehensive limits on use of credit card instalments. • 15 August –
Qatar pledged to invest $15 billion in Turkey making lira rally by 6%. • 16 August – The Turkish Statistical Institute reported that Turkey's industrial production declined by 2 percent in June from May, contracting for a second-straight month. • 27 August – The Turkish Statistical Institute reported its economic confidence index dropping in August from 91.9 to 88.0, with another sharp drop in construction sector confidence leading the declines. • 28 August –
Moody's downgraded another 20 Turkish financial institutions. The ratings agency estimated that Turkey's
operating environment had "deteriorated beyond its previous expectations", and predicted that this deterioration would continue. • 29 August – Ownership of insolvent Turk Telekom transferred to "a joint venture of creditor banks." Another measure of Turkish economic confidence slid from 92.2 in July to 83.9 in August, its lowest level since March 2009. Research from consultancy
Capital Economics indicated that Turkey has entered a 'steep' recession and predicted that the Turkish economy would contract by as much as 4% in the fourth quarter of 2018, before stagnating in 2019. • 30 August – Erkan Kilimci, the deputy governor of the Turkish central bank, resigned, putting further pressure on the lira, which fell almost 5% against the dollar throughout the day. • 3 September – Turkey's central bank announced that inflation in August had risen to nearly 18 percent, a 15-year high. • 10 September – Data released by the Turkish Statistical Institute showed a slowdown in Turkey's economic growth in the second quarter of 2018. The country saw a 5.2 percent increase in GDP in the June quarter, compared to 7.3 percent in the first quarter of the year. Finance minister Berat Albayrak predicted that the economic slowdown would become more visible in the third quarter of 2018. • 12 September – Erdoğan sacked the entire management staff of Turkey's
sovereign wealth fund and named himself chairman of the fund. He also appointed Zafer Sonmez, formerly of Malaysia's government investment vehicle, as general manager. • 13 September – Erdoğan published an executive decree requiring all contracts between two Turkish entities to be made in lira. The measure took effect immediately and requires existing contracts to be reindexed to the lira within 30 days. During a speech in Ankara, Erdoğan sharply criticized the Turkish central bank and urged the bank to cut interest rates. Instead, the central bank sharply increased its benchmark lending rate, from 17.75 percent to 24 percent, beating Reuters' predictions of a hike to 22 percent.
Timeline of events (2019) • 3 January: Inflation data showed continued high levels, prompting concerns about economic stability. • 31 January: The Turkish government announced new measures to stabilize the lira. • 22 March 2019: The government restricted foreign exchange transactions ahead of local elections. • 31 March: Local elections took place, with economic concerns influencing voter sentiment. • 6 June 2019: President Erdoğan dismissed the central bank governor, raising fears of political interference. • 25 June: The Turkish lira experienced sharp volatility following the dismissal. • 25 July 2019: The new central bank governor cut interest rates significantly, aiming to boost growth. • 12 September 2019: Inflation showed signs of decline, but economic uncertainty persisted. • 30 December 2019: The Turkish economy showed slight recovery, but concerns remained over long-term stability.
Timeline of events (2020) Timeline of events (2021) • 25 October – The sought-after expulsion of ambassadors from Canada, Denmark, France,
Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Finland, New Zealand and the United States also caused a fall of the Turkish Lira. The expulsion was later not carried out. • 18 November – The
Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey (CBRT) cut its rate by 100 basis points to 15%, and signaled that the rates would be cut further before the end of the year. The rates had been slashed by 400 basis points since September 2021. After the rate cut decision, the lira fell to a new record low trading at 10.7738 against the dollar, reversing earlier gains. After Erdoğan's speech, the lira went into a free fall, crashing to a record low of 13.44 to the dollar, before recovering to 12.75. Many local and international companies operating in Turkey, including
Apple, halted Lira-denominated sales. • 16-17 December - Under Erdoğan's pressure, the CBRT cut its interest rate again, by 100 basis points, despite warnings not to do so, which made lira fall by 5.6%, to 15.689 TRY to the US dollar. The next day, the
BIST 100 index fell by a total of 8% during the trading day, triggering a
circuit breaker on the stock exchange. The lira fell almost 7% that day, touching the 17 TRY/USD mark. • 20 December - Erdoğan doubled down on his ultra-loose monetary policy by citing the
usury doctrine (which prohibits lending with interest) and insisting that the bank would not stop cutting its interest rates, prompting another currency selloff and plunging the lira to about 17.60 to the US dollar. The currency lost 58% of the value from the beginning of the year up to that date. The lira dropped to an all-time low of 18.36 TRY to the dollar but Erdoğan stepped in, announcing measures designed to protect lira-denominated deposits and to encourage converting foreign exchange deposits to liras. The market reacted immediately, moving the Turkish currency to ca. 13.50 liras/USD, after peaking at about 12.30, in what was the widest swing in the exchange rate since 1983. • 21 December - frenetic trading continues, with the exchange rate dropping to 11.0935 per dollar before going up to about 12.90 later in the morning and 12.50 by the afternoon. Despite lira's gains, its strength is still severely diminished since January 2021, when 7.40 liras was enough to buy a US dollar. • 23 December - amid continued optimism related to the new economic plan and as the state banks have poured almost $7 billion during the week preceding 23 December to stabilise the currency, the USD/TRY exchange rate falls another 10% to oscillate around 11 lira to the US dollar. The lira hit 10.5343 to the dollar mark during trading, Investors, however, brace for more volatility as the Borsa Istanbul 100 index tumbles.
Timeline of events (2022) • 4 July - Annual rate of inflation from June 2021 to June 2022 is reported to have reached 78.6%, with food prices doubling and transport costs increasing 123%. Since the beginning of the year, the Turkish lira has lost 20% of its value against the US dollar.
Timeline of events (2023) • In 2023, Erdoğan began to follow orthodox banking methods. Under the guidance of
Mehmet Şimşek and
Hafize Gaye Erkan, the central bank began to rapidly increase interest rates. By the end of the year, the interest rate stood at 42.5%, and the annual inflation rate decreased to 53.86%.
Timeline of events (2024) • March - The central bank increased the interest rate to 50% under
Fatih Karahan, the new governor. • 9 June - The
Turkish Statistical Institute reports that the inflation rate of consumer prices rose 75.45% in May 2024, 3.37% on a monthly basis and up from 69.8% in April 2024. The steepest inflation rates were in education at 104.8%, housing at 93.2%, and hotels, cafes and restaurants at 92.9%.
Capital Economics initially predicted that Turkish inflation would peak at 75%, but the higher rate of monthly inflation increase compared to both March and April made that prediction less certain. • November - Inflation decreased to 47.09%. Interest rates kept as 50% for eight consecutive months. == International consequences ==