Turkish growth sensitive to potential US rate hikes, says Moody’s analyst
An eventual interest rate hike by the U.S. Federal Reserve could threaten Turkish economic growth, a Moodyâs analyst said Nov. 26.
âTurkeyâs growth model is largely dependent on external financing and a rate hike from the U.S. Federal Reserve could reduce that inflow of capital,â said Alpona Banerji, Moodyâs senior Turkey analyst, in an interview with Anadolu Agency ahead of the release of Moodyâs Turkey report on Dec. 5.
âThe challenges associated with the interest rate hike by the U.S. Federal Reserve expected next year will exacerbate the Turkish economyâs vulnerability to shocks,â Banerji said. âEconomic growth in Turkey is unlikely to increase this year, given lower inflows of capital, high inflation and high interest rates, all of which are expected to dampen both domestic consumption and investment activity.â
Turkey has to make structural reforms to improve economic performance and increase growth, Banerji added.
Moodyâs has forecast Turkey to grow 2.8 percent next year.
In its last report, Moodyâs had estimated Turkeyâs growth performance to hover between 2.5 percent to 3.5 percent this year and the next.
Another senior economist from Moodyâs, Global Sovereign Risk Group head Alastair Wilson, said Moodyâs expected U.S. interest rate hikes to have limited implications for emerging markets, but that could change.
âA hike in interest rates should have limited implications for emerging market economies or sovereigns. However, we saw in 2013 and earlier this year how events can exceed expectations, prompting yield rises, exchange rate pressures and reversals in capital flows.â Wilson said.
âShould those conditions recur, the impact would be felt most...
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