Turkey grows 4.3 percent in first quarter, fueling year-end hopes
The Turkish economy grew 4.3 percent in the first quarter of 2014, mainly due to strong exports that benefited from a weak Turkish Lira in a period marked by a fragile domestic market, high interest rates and a tense political environment.
The gross-domestic product (GDP) rose to 29.2 billion liras between January and March after rising by 4.3 percent compared to the same period last year, the Turkish Statistical Institute (TÃÄ°K) announced on June 10. Analysts had predicted that growth would be hovering at around 4 percent.
The first-quarter growth has been mainly shouldered by exports that rose over 11 percent compared to the same period last year.
Government spending was another important driver of the firmer-than-expected figures. As shown by the TÃÄ°K data, public sector expenditures soared ahead of the March 30 local elections, increasing by 8.6 percent compared to the same month last year.
According to calculations made by bankers who used TÃÄ°K data, growth has been pulled by 2.7 points mainly due to net exports, 2.1 points by domestic consumption, 0.9 points by government consumption spending and 0.2 points by government investments. While private sector investments pulled it down by 0.3 points and inventory variation by 1.2 points.
The governmentâs economy agencies welcomed the data, interpreting it as a sign that the growth target for the end of the year will be achieved despite looming downward risks.
Ali Babacan, deputy prime minister in charge of economic affairs, said internal and external demand entered a balancing process during the first quarter with macro-prudential measures being introduced at the beginning of year.
With the aim of raising the domestic savings rate...
- Log in to post comments