FDI inflow to Turkey rises by 10 percent in 2014
International net direct investments in Turkey totaled $8.6 billion in the first eight months of 2014, a 9.8 percent increase from the same period of the previous year, the Economy Ministry announced on Oct. 27.
The manufacturing sector benefited most from foreign direct investments, at $2.1 billion, followed by the financial sector at $1.18 billion.
The ministry data showed that 63 percent of the capital, almost $3.8 billion, came from the European Union.
The data also showed that 2,801 foreign-funded new companies were established in the first eight months of the year, up from the 2,313 firms registered in the same period last year, good for an increase of 21.1 percent.
As of August 2014, a total of 40,506 companies were operating in Turkey with international capital, 24,136 of them in Istanbul, the ministry said.
Antalya followed Istanbul with 4,313 companies.
Some 5,949 companies are German-funded and 2,736 have British funding.
âForeign capital inflow is of great importance for Turkey as the countryâs savings ratio is not sufficient to fuel its 5 percent growth target,â Turkish Economy Minister Nihat Zeybekci said Oct. 17.
âIt is not possible for Turkey to reach its 2023 economic targets with its current low levels of savings.
We want to grow more through foreign direct investments to our country to achieve sustainable, predictable and stable growth,â Zeybekci said at the âRegional Hub for Sustainable Competitiveness: Turkeyâ conference of the International Investors Association of Turkey (YASED) in Istanbul, vowing to do âwhatever it takesâ to attract more FDI to Turkey.
âWe know how low our savings are, at around 16 percent of our GDP. This amount is...
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