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Türkiye After a strong first half of the year, economic growth is projected to reach 4.5% in 2023, before slowing to 2.9% in 2024 and 3.2% in 2025. Tighter financial conditions, subdued economic sentiment and stubbornly high inflation will moderate household consumption. However, investment growth will remain elevated due to ongoing reconstruction activity following the earthquakes at the beginning of this year. Exports will gain traction in 2025, reflecting stronger global growth. Inflation is projected to decline over the projection period, but will remain considerably high. Further rate rises are expected as the central bank is now determined to tighten monetary policy as needed until there is a significant improvement in the inflation outlook. Meanwhile, the government is moving ahead with fiscal consolidation measures to stabilise public finances. Accelerating labour supply reforms would help to support the current efforts to stabilise the macroeconomic framework. Robust growth was supported by domestic demand Despite earthquake-induced effects, economic activity remained strong in the first half of the year. High growth was driven by strong domestic demand supported by overly accommodative monetary and fiscal policy. Real household consumption growth was one of the highest rates in the last 40 years. The unemployment rate has dropped below 10%. However, forward-looking indicators such as consumer confidence and capacity utilisation suggest a moderation of growth for the second half of the year. Furthermore, inflation remains persistently high and reached almost 60% in October, driven by higher input costs, strong demand, and the depreciation of the lira, which has lost almost one-third of its value since the beginning of the year. Tourism revenues have helped to reduce the high current account deficit. The number of foreign visitors rose by 12.6% to almost 40 million people in the first 9 months of the year compared to the same period last year. The depleted foreign currency reserves have also started to increase. However, higher energy prices and the slowdown in the global economy could generate pressures on the current account balance, though the start of natural gas production from the Sakarya field will ease these risks somewhat.
Türkiye
Source: OECD Main Economic Indicators database; CBRT; and BIS, Central bank policy rates. StatLink 2 https://stat.link/d8uhg2 OECD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, VOLUME 2023 ISSUE 2: PRELIMINARY VERSION © OECD 2023