Monday, March 22, 2010

March 15, 2010


Turkey – Review of Political and Economic Developments

March 15, 2010    

EPA has decided to discontinue its bi-weekly Review for Turkey.

EPA’s quarterly assessments and projections as well as monthly indicators, however, will be made available on its website as they are updated.


Political Developments

ad.jpgChicken come home to roost.  The Davutoğlu-inspired high wire act, otherwise known as Turkey’s new foreign policy orientation is now stuck with two ambassadors recalled home and Erdoğan spewing fire all over the globe – something he seems to be thoroughly enjoying.  Another egg on Turkey’s face last week was the statement from the Israeli Foreign Ministry that said  "No decision has been made on resuming talks with Syria under Turkey mediation, but if these remarks represent Turkey's desire to improve relations with Israel and contribute to the advancement of peace in the region, then it is obviously a welcome aspiration," after Erdoğan told reporters in Saudi that Israel has accepted Ankara's offer to mediate the talk and the stalled talks may begin again at "any minute".

Abdul Islam or Abdul Malik? Erdoğan received the King Faisal International Prize for having "rendered outstanding service to Islam” from the Saudi King Abdullah. It would be good to know whether has yet handed over the 200-gram gold medal and $ 200,000 that he received as part of the prize to the Treasury yet as he should have under the ethics rules.

Someone definitely needs treatment. In an interview with the daily Hürriyet, State Minister Aliye Kavaf said “I believe homosexuality is a biological disorder, a disease. I believe [homosexuality] is something that needs to be treated.”

Oh, freedoms! Reporters Without Borders issued its annual report on countries least tolerant of Internet freedoms. While Burma, China, Cuba, Egypt, Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Tunisia, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Vietnam were listed under the category of ”Enemies of the Internet”, Turkey was listed among the countries “Under Surveillance” together with Australia, Bahrain, Belarus, Eritrea, Malaysia, Russia, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and United Arab Emirates.

Economic Developments

Cut the BS! The IMF told the Government to stop fooling the markets with “an imminent agreement” with the Fund that lasted for almost two years. In a statement, IMF said on Tuesday that talks between the International Monetary Fund and Turkey on a possible loan "are no longer taking place." The IMF noted that the Article IV consultation that typically took place annually with all members was long overdue - the last was in 2007 – and a mission would travel to Turkey in the first half of May for annual consultations. One of the prominent columnists and TV commentator wrote last week that “he was not surprised when the IMF negotiations ended as he had a gut feeling of 50 percent failure for over a year.” What an impressive insight!

Not so quick. Reuters reported that Turkey is unlikely to get an investment grade rating in the near term due to fault line between its secularist military and Islamic-leaning government, a Fitch analyst said on Tuesday. "Even if things were to go reasonably well it is unlikely we would get to investment grade this side of elections until we are relatively confident that constitutional reform that will be needed can pass through without serious political unrest," Fitch’s senior director Edward Parker said at a conference on sovereign risk. "This fault line is going to be with us for the foreseeable future and it's going to generate a lot of noise and something that an assessment of Turkish risk has to take in," Parker added.

Debunking myths. One of the key concerns about the capacity for making economic policy in Turkey is whether the AKP leadership is any clue about what is going on in the rest of the world. A day does not go by without Erdoğan proclaiming that Turkey is the least affected economy from the global crisis or Turkey will be fastest recovering country and so on. Erdoğan himself is unable to access facts and data in other languages, therefore, he must depend on the information flow fed to him by his aides. Unless these aides do not understand the world they live in or they distort information that they provide up, Erdoğan is perfectly capable of twisting the facts himself and continue to live in the bubble he creates. Data and analysis provided primarily by OECD – data for the BRICs have been added by EPA - show where Turkey stands on a number of indicators:

Turkey had the second highest unemployment rate after Spain in 2009 and is projected to have the second highest in 2010.


Turkey also ranked fifth in terms of inflation in 2009.


Turkey’s GDP decline was the fourth from the bottom after Russia, Ireland, Iceland and Hungary in 2009. OECD’s projection for GDP growth in 2010 is on the high side; it is more likely to be closer to the OCD average:



Finally, Turkey ISE-100 performed significantly below the average for emerging markets in terms of year-to-date and 5-year returns:


Briefly:

·         The Treasury sold a net TL 579.6 million ($377 million) in a tap of a fixed-coupon bond on Tuesday at an average compound yield of 10.82 percent. While the cost of borrowing in lira has gone up, Turkey on Thursday sold $1.0 billion of 11-year bonds, said IFR, a Thomson Reuters service. The 5.625 percent bonds were priced at 98.986 to yield 5.75 percent, or 202.7 basis points over comparable U.S. Treasuries, according to IFR.

·         Korea Electric Power Corp. signed a cooperation agreement with Turkey's Elektrik Uretim to build a nuclear energy reactor on the Black Sea coast. Korea Electric Power Corp. will bid along with a Enka group in a partnership to build the four-reactor, 5,600-megawatt facility in northern Turkey.

·         This year’s Forbes magazine’s list of billionaires included 28 Turkish billionaires, up from 12 last year, but below 35 reported two years ago. The richest Turk was Hüsnü Özyeğin, with a net worth of $3 billion. Özyeğin was followed by Mehmet Emin Karamehmet, with $2.9 billion and Şarık Tara, at $2.6 billion. Mustafa Latif Topbaş who ranked 937th with $1 billion is the biggest shareholder of BİM, a fast-growing supermarket chain. He has a 17.98 percent share in the chain, which has 2,665 supermarkets in Turkey and a market value of TL 5.3 billion. He seems to be first devout AKP supporter who made the billionaires list.

·         Sberbank, Russia's biggest lender, is lining up a bid for the 20.85 percent stake in Turkey's Garanti Bank being sold by General Electric Co. The stake in Garanti, the most actively traded stock on the Istanbul stock exchange, is worth almost $3.7 billion at current market prices. U.S. conglomerate General Electric is selling the stake as part of its strategy to scale back its finance arm. Turkish media have also reported Spain's Banco Santander, Italy's Intesa Sanpaolo and a Gulf-based investment fund as among the potential bidders for the stake. A market source in Turkey told Reuters in February that HSBC Holdings Plc and Standard Chartered Plc were also potential bidders. 

Sunday, March 21, 2010

March 1, 2010


Turkey – Review of Political and Economic Developments

March 1, 2010

Political Developments

Hits the fan. Last two weeks witnessed the fiercest clashes within the judiciary and the largest crackdown on the military. The first was sparked by the arrest of the chief prosecutor in Erzincan by another prosecutor in Erzurum with charges that he was allied with the Ergenekon network - a large and diverse group alleged with trying to overthrow the AKP government in a military coup. Next day, the Supreme Council of Judges and Prosecutors stripped special powers from the prosecutor who ordered the arrest. The council’s action led the Justice Ministry to accuse it of playing politics and interfering in the business of the judiciary. At the same time, the Supreme Court and the State Council supported the Supreme Council’s decision to strip the powers of the Erzurum prosecutor, citing a number of procedural mistakes committed in arresting the prosecutor in Erzincan. The second was the mass arrests of several active duty and retired military officers as part of an investigation into an alleged secret action plan called Sledgehammer, which prosecutors say was aimed at overthrowing Erdoğan’s government in 2003 after destabilizing the country with violence against civilian targets, including mosques. These events – and added rumors that the Chief Prosecutor could make a renewed attempt to ban the AKP, having tried and failed two years ago - fueled political tensions to escalate, culminating in a sell-off of Turkish assets with ISE-100 declining 8.5 percent week-on-week and the risk-reversal rate widened from 2.25 percentage points a week ago and is the highest of 48 currencies on Bloomberg. An emergency meeting held by the President, Prime Minister and the Chief of the General Staff aimed at defusing a political crisis added up to nothing more than bad political theater. The fact that three of the detained retired senior officers — the former heads of the air force and the navy, and a former deputy head of the army — were released later that day enforced the view that these investigations and arrests were in part politically manipulated. While the lira recovered and shares on stock exchange gained two percent on Friday, further detentions and a wave of arrests across the country continued Friday evening.
The AKP and its supporters insist the investigations are uncovering a deep-rooted conspiracy aimed at overthrowing democracy and reversing a trend toward a transparent society governed by the rule of law. Opponents claim that the series of coup allegations, mostly trumped up charges based on dubious evidence, are AKP’s ploy to subjugate the military and the judiciary, two institutions that AKP sees as impediments to further its agenda. The reality is probably more complex than these two views; AKP that faces declining votes after the 2009 local government elections presided over a serious economic crisis during which the economy declined five, perhaps six quarters on a row with mounting unemployment, wants to consolidate power before facing voters next year. There are factions in the party that push for a major confrontation with the military, while others are concerned about increasing authoritarian style of Erdoğan and felt the need to bring Gül to the forefront to assuage fears of political instability. Opponents also point out to the fact that accounts of the latest coup allegations treat the coup threat as current, failing to note that the alleged plans were drawn up seven years ago and that no coup materialized.

As EPA highlighted in its latest Prospects report, the political tensions that crested last week are likely to intensify in the months to come. Despite the seeming truce that came out of the meeting last week, AKP is likely to step up sustained attacks on the judiciary and military hoping that a showdown would strengthen its chances at the polls with its growing assertiveness helped by pro-AKP segments in the judiciary and the police force. Talking to his party leadership on Friday, “Those who plot to crush people’s will behind closed doors should realize that from now on they will face the law,” Erdoğan said. “The process under way is painstaking, but it is for the benefit of the people. Today’s developments are setting free the consciousness of the people.” During the same speech, it was ironic to see Erdoğan who boasts loudly of AKP’s democratic credentials to call on media owners to get rid of columnists and reporters who criticize the government.

What AKP sees and advertises as “normalization” or “democratization” created an environment where the state, institutions and the society have become dysfunctional.[1] The codependence between the ruling party and the opposition makes politics toxic and focused on an agenda of power grabbing rather than dealing with an relevant to the country’s problems.
Beware of reforms, AKP style! The developments in the last two weeks made AKP leadership, from Gül down, a sudden proponent of urgent judicial reform. While judicial reform has been on top of the list of the key structural reforms that should have been undertaken, it has been sidelined by the government for the last eight years. What AKP means with judicial reform is creating the conditions for the executive to subjugate the judiciary so that the separation of powers is no longer a stumbling block. Most of the reforms that AKP has undertaken have been pharisaic; privatization, to a large extent, resulted in giving away state property to cronies. Undertaken without the proper legal and institutional infrastructure, it lead to a lot of grievances, including the ongoing hunger strike by the former Tekel employees; Social security reform resulted only in parametric changes without much impact on reducing the gray economy and lowering high labor taxes; Health reform resulted in runaway budget outlays and creation of a large number of customers for private hospitals – a favorite sector where pro-AKP investors heavily invested - paid by the state; The decentralization reform resulted in municipalities currying favors to party supporters and raise funds to finance election expenses. There are significant differences between what structural reforms mean to international community and what AKP understands and means by them. It has been able to get away with it, in part because of the willingness of the EU, IMF and the World Bank to take their reform rhetoric at its face value. Unless their approach to reform changes from “what is in it for us?” to “how can the country benefit from it?” it will be a long while before structural changes can take place in Turkey. The reason why a comprehensive tax reform has not been undertaken is not to alienate AKP political base that pretty much lives and blossoms in the gray economy. That’s also why the judicial reform has been put off, until AKP leadership started seeing it as an opportunity to trample the judiciary.

Living on a different planet? Listening to Erdoğan’s TV address to the nation on Friday, most viewers must have wondered if they live on the same planet with him. While he might have felt the need to paint a rosy picture of Turkey in the face of the political mess that country is in, he also should be careful in manipulating facts; he pointed out to a 12.5 percent increase in exports based on preliminary data provided by the Assembly of Turkish Exporters about a month ago when the official data released by Turkstat earlier that day showed that exports declined 0.3 percent in January. Whether it is because of ignorance or distorting facts, it undermines credibility of the policy makers a lot more than columnists who criticize the government.

Economic Developments

Village wedding. Standard & Poor's Ratings Services raised Turkey's long-term foreign currency and local currency sovereign credit ratings to BB and BB+, respectively. "The upgrade reflects our view of the Turkish government's improving economic policy flexibility as a result of its strong track record in steadily reducing the debt burden over the past decade," said Standard & Poor's credit analyst Frank Gill in a statement. "It also reflects our opinion of the success of Turkey's regulatory institutions in preserving the solidity of the financial sector, despite external adversity." S&P said it believes Turkey's banking system to be one of the strongest and least-leveraged in Eastern Europe. The agency also noted that local capital markets are continuing to develop, enabling the government to begin to place local currency debt at maturities as high as 10 years. The outlook on the ratings is positive, reflecting the possibility of another upgrade over the next 12-24 months, S&P said. Rating change follows earlier upgrade by two notches to BB+ from BB- by Fitch in December, but markets kept buying the same news over and over until the joyous celebrations were interrupted by last week’s political developments.

Big deal! Finance Minister Şimşek told a group of businesspeople in Switzerland that Turkey could grow 4-5 times faster than Europe this year. Thursday, the European Commission left its 2010 economic growth forecast for both Euro-zone and EU27 unchanged at 0.7 percent. It sounds better, though, than saying Turkey’s growth will be between a quarter and a third of China’s growth in 2010.

Exports stagnate. Exports fell 0.3 percent year-on-year to $7.8 billion in January, while imports surged 23.9 percent to $11.50 billion, Turkstat said Friday. Trade deficit increased by 160.6 percent y-o-y to $3.6 billion. Exports in January were still 25 percent below their peak level in 2008. Automotive exports, one of the large ticket items in the recent years, increased 63 percent y-o-y to $1.1 billion in January, but remained 35 percent below its level $1.6 billion recorded in January 2008.

Happier? According to the results of its life satisfaction survey for 2009 released by Turkstat, 54.3 percent of the respondents said that they were happy with their lives while 31.1 percent were neither happy or unhappy.. This shows a significant decline from 60.5 percent recorded in 2007. The share of people who responded that they were unhappy reached 14.6 percent in 2009 doubling from its level in 2003. A similar survey conducted by Eurofund across Europe shows that Turkey scored 6.6 out of 10 for happiness in 2007, putting it in the third place from the bottom – above Bulgaria and FYR Macedonia. Compared the 2003 survey, Turkey’s scored increased by 0.1. This tallies with the Turkstat’s surveys conducted in 2003 and 2007. Turkey ranked the highest in the deprivation index where the respondents were asked if they lacked any of a range of six items - adequate home heating, an annual holiday, new furniture to replace worn-out items, a meal with meat every second day, new clothes, the wherewithal to entertain guests at home - because they were unable to afford them. In Turkey, for example, the richest citizens are more deprived than the poorest in the Netherlands, Sweden and Luxembourg. Turkey, however, ranked at the bottom, scoring 47 on the mental health index[2] followed by Malta, Romania, FYR Macedonia and Latvia (all between 53 and 55) while the EU15 and Norway had the highest scores with people in Norway averaging the highest at 70.

Briefly

· General Electric will sell its stake in Turkey's Garanti Bank sources from GE money said on Thursday. GE holds a 20.85 percent stake worth $3.3 billion in Garanti, Turkey's top-traded company and the country's largest listed bank by market value. "GE is not exiting Turkey completely, only GE Money is selling its stake in Garanti Bank in line with its global reduction strategy," a source said, but would not elaborate on the reasons for the sale. Habertürk reported Thursday that Doğuş was entitled to a first chance to buy the shares, but that it and GE had failed to agree a sale in talks last week. The newspaper said JPMorgan & Chase Co. had been hired to sell the shares.
· The total wealth of Turkey's richest people has risen up to $ 87 billion. According to Forbes Turkey magazine's "100 Wealthiest Turks" list, Hüsnü Özyeğin is the "richest Turk", with his fortune reaching $3 billion. Mehmet Emin Karamehmet and Şarık Tara follow Özyeğin in the ranking, with their wealth estimated at $2.9 billion and $2.6 billion respectively.
· Doğan Holding said last week that plans for Axel Springer AG to buy a 29 percent stake in Doğan Yayın Holding AŞ have been terminated.

February 15, 2010

Turkey – Review of Political and Economic Developments
February 15, 2010
Political Developments
Making amends. Gül’s visit to India (and Bangladesh) with a large group of businesspeople is a good step towards expanding Turkey’s horizons to dynamic economies of Asia. The trip also helped Turkey to make amends for not inviting India for the conference on Afghanistan in Istanbul last month. Ahead of Gül’s visit, Ankara has also told New Delhi that it is planning to organize another conference on the economic situation in Afghanistan later this year and would invite India. India was miffed for being kept out of that regional conference on Afghanistan held in Turkey at the behest of Pakistan.
Cutting loose from the EU? Last week, The European Parliament (EP) adopted separate resolutions Wednesday on accession progress made in the last year by each of the three official EU candidates. It gave a positive overall assessment of Croatia and Macedonia's efforts to qualify for entry in the 27-nation bloc. Turkey's preparations for membership, it said, remained "limited". The resolution on Turkey’s progress report is critical of the limited progress in democratic reforms, particularly of the inaction on the revision of the election law and ten percent threshold, lifting parliamentary immunities, rights of trade union, and ratification of the Optional Protocol on the UN Convention against Torture, among others. The European Parliament is also concerned for continued restrictions on press freedom, the lack of guarantees against discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and is “concerned about the alleged magnitude of the Ergenekon criminal network and the Sledgehammer Plan; urges the Government and the judiciary to ensure that all proceedings are fully in line with the due process of law and that the rights of all defendants are respected; shares the assessment of the Commission that Turkey must approach this case as an opportunity to strengthen confidence in the proper functioning of its democratic institutions and the rule of law; urges the Turkish Government not to allow legal proceedings to be used as a pretext to exert undue pressure on critical journalists, academics or opposition politicians.” The resolution criticized Ankara for its continuing refusal to open its ports and airports to Greek Cypriot ships and planes and warned that this "may further seriously affect the process of negotiations". The resolution further urged Ankara to support the ongoing talks on ending the more than 35-year-old division of Cyprus and contribute "in concrete terms" to the effort of reaching a comprehensive solution. It also said that Turkey must immediately begin removing its forces from the island.
A number of developments last week seem to point out to a systematic effort to part ways from the EU accession process:
· First, Turkey's chief negotiator for the EU Egemen Bağış, before the vote, had said that he thought the EP report should not be taken seriously. Bağış said Turkey could neither sacrifice Cyprus for the EU membership bid, nor the EU for Cyprus. He also said the draft resolution was actually hampering ongoing negotiations, not supporting them. Although it is not binding, the European Parliament report is important since it reflects the EU's perspective.
· Second, Erdoğan’s response to the resolution was fierce. Not unlike during his domestic yelling sessions, he told the ambassadors of EU member states at a lunch that he hosted that Turks were becoming frustrated with the EU's position and repeated questioning as to whether Turkey is part of Europe. "Although all member states signed the agreement to kick off accession negotiations with Turkey, it is discouraging and unrealistic to question its European identity," he said. On the resolution, an angry Erdoğan told the ambassadors. ” Is the European Parliament blind? They should open up their eyes and ears to the facts a little."
· Third, the recent wave of visa exemptions that Turkey has been concluding goes in the opposite direction of the efforts to obtain visa-free circulation for the citizens of Turkey in the EU. In the (unlikely) event of Turkey participating in the Schengen regime, it will have to renege on all other agreements.
· Fourth, Davutoğlu has been calling for the establishment of a union encompassing the Eurasia region similar to the European Union. “The western and eastern ends of Eurasia should be reconnected,” Davutoğlu told to a gathering of diplomats from Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Moldova, the Russian Federation, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine and Uzbekistan, while underlining that the region should also serve as a link between energy-supplying countries and energy-receiving countries. “We can become the power engine of the world’s economy.” Press reports indicate that he was pushing the Eurasia Union theme during his visit to Kazakhstan last week. A recent book entitled “European Union or Turkish Union?” by the prominent AKP strategist Nevzat Yalçıntaş lays the framework for uniting Turks and making such a union a superpower where he says that Turkey does not have another fifty years to waste on EU accession. AKP leadership, however, has to get over the delusion of leading the world when its own house looks like the witches cauldron.
Some of these developments, bordering naiveté and a total lack of understanding of regional geopolitics and others reflecting the public sentiment towards EU, sound like gambits that could prove to be costly. Perhaps, Ottomans’ “sons” should sit in Ankara for a while and get their act together before embarking on “expeditions” like a headless chicken.
Coups away? The current issue of the Economist carries a more balanced – to date analysis of the escalating tensions between AKP and the military and poses the question: “The army’s image has been badly tarnished and its role is now being questioned. Is its influence fading irreversibly as Turkey becomes a fully fledged Western democracy? Or is this just the latest twist in the long battle between the elite, made up of generals and an old guard used to monopolising wealth and power, against a rising class of overtly pious Anatolians, symbolised by the AK government?” Neither the former, misleading in the face of increasing autocratic behavior of the ruling party nor the latter, a not-to-insightful simplification of the political transition in Turkey characterize the dynamics of ongoing power grabbing and the civilian coup, ironically, in the name democracy. The Economist piece concludes with 'Back in 1909, Ataturk delivered a speech to his fellow Young Turks. “Our colleagues in the army should no longer dabble in politics,” he said. “They should direct all their efforts to strengthening the army instead.” Over 100 years later, the message may at last be getting through.' It, however, begs the question
why Atatürk did not heed his own advice.
The culprit! It would not be surprising if the next Ergenekon indictment includes charges that the recent bad weather and snowstorms were also caused by Ergenekon. The latest tragicomic development was the allegations by a former prosecutor of İliç district of Erzincan, Bayram Bozkurt who faces a long list of corruption charges that everyone who accused him belongs to the Ergenekon gang and tried to assassinate him by planting Crimean-Congo virus bearing ticks in his car. Bozkurt has now been enlisted as a witness in the Ergenekon trial.
So much for that. The Supreme Court sentenced Mustafa Yaman, former governor of Tunceli to 7½ months in prison and dismissal from the civil service for violating election laws by distributing free household appliances just before the March 2009 local government elections despite warnings from the High Elections Board. Yaman’s sentence was, however, suspended for five years on probation. He currently serves as the governor of Giresun.
Economic Developments
Turkey and PIIGS. The sovereign debt crisis emanating from a group of Euro-zone countries affectionately called PIIGS - Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece and Spain - and appropriately after “pigging out” on government spending is being dismissed by most analysts in Turkey saying that Turkey’s indebtedness with respect to its GDP is nowhere near the high levels of the PIIGS. While on a stock basis, Turkey’s public debt may look comforting, it should be a serious source of concern in terms its dynamics on a flow basis. Compared with the PIIGS, interest expenditures as share of total outlays, at 20.5 percent, is the highest in Turkey, followed by Italy at 9.5 and Greece at 8.8 percent. This is the result of high borrowing costs as well as relatively smaller size of Turkey’s budget. Total government outlays account for 28.4 percent in Turkey compared to 46 percent in Ireland, 51.3 percent in Greece and 51.7 percent in Italy. Turkey also has the lowest tax burden (22.8 percent with respect to GDP) compared with Ireland (34.9 percent), Greece (38.7 percent) and Italy (46 percent). In other words, Turkey’s fiscal space is the smallest with respect to its budget and income after interest expenditures. Turkey has lived with twin deficits (current account as well) for some time, but it is on a precarious path in an uncertain global environment if it continues running up large fiscal deficits, Policymakers should be worried, not offended, and get their act together if Turkey is now being grouped with Spain, the UK, Portugal, Italy and Dubai.
Not a good start. The Treasury said Monday that it posted a cash deficit of TL 3.7 billion Turkish lira ($2.4 billion) in January after TL 6.1 billion in interest payments. The cash deficit was TL The treasury's cash balance was TL 1.9 billion in January 2009.
Closing 2009. According to the data released by the Central Bank, Turkey’s current account deficit narrowed to $13.9 billion (or 1.5 percent of GDP) in 2009 from $42 billion (or 5.7 percent of GDP) in 2008, reflecting the balance of trade that more than halved in the face of global economic crisis. With the credits drying up, the deficit was financed by foreign direct investment –also plummeted from $15.7 billion to $6 billion in net terms- and large capital inflows of about $8.4 billion under net errors and omissions.

Base effect or sign of recovery? Turkey's industrial production increased 25.2 percent year-on-year in December, data released by the Turkstat showed Monday. On a monthly basis, industrial output gained 8.7 percent. Calendar adjusted industrial production increased by 8.3 percent compared to the same month of previous year and calendar and seasonal adjusted industrial production index increased by 0.7 percent compared to previous month. According to the statistics released by the Turkish Automotive Manufacturers' Association (OSD), in January 2010, Turkey's motor vehicle output totaled 78,335 units, increasing by 97 percent year on year but down by 17.43 percent over the month of December 2009. The increases on year-on-year basis in all segments of automotive production are largely due to the base effect, as underlined by the OSD. The overall production capacity utilization rate of the automotive industry in January was 60 percent, down from 73 percent recorded in December 2009.
Smart move. Fiba Group has signed an agreement with Banco Comercial Portugues to purchase 95 percent of Millennium Bank in Turkey for a total price of approximately € 61.8 million, subject to a final adjustment when the transaction is completed. Banco Comercial Português will retain a 5 percent stake in the company, having agreed with Fiba on a put and call mechanism to sell the remaining stake. In 2006, Fiba Group sold 46 percent shares of Finansbank Turkey and its subsidiaries for $2.8 billion to National Bank of Greece (NBG). The remaining 9.68 percent shares held by Fiba Group were sold to NBG in September 2008 for $ 697 million. Fiba’s subsidiary Credit Europe Bank operates in the Netherlands, Germany, Belgium, Switzerland, Russia, Romania, Ukraine, Dubai and Malta. Credit Europe Bank is one of the top ten banks in the Netherlands with total assets of €10 billion Euro 290 branches and 5920 employees by end-2009.

February 1, 2010

Turkey – Review of Political and Economic Developments
February 1, 2010


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Political Developments
Brothers, yes, but. Speaking to reporters in Davos, Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev said that “No resolution has been reached despite some twenty months of negotiations between Turkey and Azerbaijan on new natural gas prices. The price Turkey pays for the natural gas it purchases from Azerbaijan is too low, and it is not possible to continue natural gas trade under such conditions”. Turkey continues to pay $120 for thousand cubic meters of Azerbaijani natural gas, this according to a contract that “ended on April 15, 2008” and Azerbaijan sells Russia natural gas at a price of $300 for thousand cubic meters, Aliyev noted.
Between a rock and a hard place. On Wednesday, Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev said he was confident Turkey would not ratify the agreement until Armenia has returned Azeri territory that it occupies, including Karabakh. Armenia accused Turkey on Friday of trying to block a deal to establish diplomatic ties and open their border and warned their bid to overcome a century of hostility could collapse.
Found his match? Erdoğan on Sunday warned Israel should to "take another look at its relations with its neighbors" if it wants to maintain ties with Turkey in the future. "Israel should give some thought to what it would be like to lose a friend like Turkey in the future," Erdoğan told Euronews, regarding his thoughts on the recent tensions between the two Mediterranean countries. "We have done our best for Israel-Syria relations," added Erdoğan. "But now we see Benjamin Netanyahu saying: 'I do not trust Erdogan, but I trust Sarkozy'. Do you have to give a name? This is diplomatic inexperience, too."
A good start. Sofia and Ankara have signed a memorandum to make the existing gas pipeline between the two neighboring countries reversible and build a new gas link, Bulgarian energy minister Traicho Traikov said. This follows the visit of Bulgarian Prime Minister Boiko Borissov to Turkey where he told a joint news conference with Erdoğan that Bulgaria supports reforms in Turkey and its desire to join the European Union "We are for the reforms and we want the European integration of the Balkan countries to continue, but we have also laid certain claims. There should be balance in this bilateral process,” he added. It was reported that the issue of Bulgaria’s claim against Turkey for compensation for Bulgarians forced out of Turkey in 1913 had been raised and both sides had agreed that the issue should be resolved through cooperation rather than confrontation. Bulgaria and Turkey also have agreed on opening two new ferry services, between Varna and Samsun and between Varna and Zonguldak, and on extending the volume of flights at the airports of Sofia, Plovdiv, Varna, Bourgas – on the Bulgarian side – and Ankara, Istanbul, Izmir and Bursa in Turkey.
Latest episode. The Constitution Court overturned with unanimous vote, a law allowing the military to be put on trial in civilian courts, a move fiercely opposed by the armed forces at a time of escalated tension with the government.
Why not start here? Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) said Turkey's Internet law was failing to preserve free expression in the country and should be changed or abolished. OSCE said that Turkey was blocking some 3,700 Internet sites, including YouTube, GeoCities and some Google pages, for "arbitrary and political reasons" and urged reforms to show its commitment to freedom of expression. It may a good place to start actually doing something about democratization, if intentions were serious.
Economic Developments
Signs of recovery? In December, Turkey’s imports increased by 31.4 percent to $15 billion and exports rose by 30.3 percent to $10 billion, bringing the trade deficit to 4.9 billion from 3.7 billion year-on-year, the trade figures that Turkstat released Friday. In 2009, imports contracted by 30.3 percent to $140.8 billion while exports decreased by 22.6 percent to $102.1 billion, resulting in a trade deficit of $38,6 billion, 45 percent below its 2008 level. Need to roll over. Treasury said on Friday, it expected total debt redemptions of TL 20.4 billion ($13.7 billion) in February and borrowing of TL 19.3 billion. For March redemptions were seen at TL 13.6 billion and borrowing was seen at 13.5 TL billion. For April redemptions were seen at TL 16.9 billion, and domestic borrowing was seen at TL 15.8 billion. The Treasury also said it could reissue its ten-year bond if market conditions allow. The issue of Turkey's first ever 10-year bond on January 25 was hit by weak market sentiment, and the yield at 11.24 percent topped forecasts of 11.11 percent.
If hot milk burned your mouth. Central Bank Governor Durmuş Yılmaz said on Tuesday the bank may cut its benchmark interest rates further if the recovery in the economy is delayed. It had already cut rates by 10.25 percentage points to a record low of 6.5 percent. Yılmaz told news conference that the bank saw interest rates at single-digit levels for the foreseeable future. He also said the bank saw a 70 percent probability that 2010 inflation would be between 5.5 percent and 8.3 percent.
Give it up! Two weeks ago, Erdoğan told the media that finalization of talks with IMF was imminent and was a matter of days. His comments were tempered by more sober comments by other ministers. Later that week, “The Turkish government has not requested a negotiating mission from IMF to finalize a loan agreement but talks are ongoing”, a Fund spokesperson told a regular press briefing.
Briefly:· Capacity utilization in manufacturing rose by 0.2 percentage points to 67.8 percent in January from 67.6 percent a month earlier, the Central Bank said last week. It was 61.4 percent a year ago.
· Central Bank’s Real sectors confidence index rose to 102 in January 2010 compared with 92.2 in December 2009 and 59.4 a year ago, A sub-index measuring overall course of business was also up; 106.9 in January 2010 vs. 96.9 for the previous month.
· The Consumer Confidence Index, jointly conducted by the Central Bank and Turkstat rose by 0.53 percent to 78.8 in December 2009, compared its November 2009 level. It stood at 69.9 in December 2008.
· Turkstat’s October unemployment figures showed that the rate of unemployment was 13 percent, up from 11.4 percent a year ago, while the rate of non-agricultural unemployment stood at 16.4 percent, up from 14 percent in October 2008. The official number for the jobless was 3.3 million.

December 20, 2009

Turkey – Review of Political and Economic Developments
December 20, 2009
Political Developments
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BDP In - DTP Out. Parliamentarians from the Kurdish Democratic Society Party (DTP) who earlier intended to give up their seats after their party was banned by the Constitution Court, decided on Friday to remain in parliament as members of another party. DTP leader Ahmet Türk said that the group will join the Peace and Democracy (BDP), a small Kurdish group that was founded recently. He added that DTP supporters and jailed leader of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) Abdullah Öcalan have urged them not to give up their mandates. Since two of the DTP representatives were banned from politics for five years, with the remaining 19 representatives, BDP will need another member to be able to form a group in the parliament, but Ufuk Uras, an independent from İstanbul is expected to join BDP. The Court’s decision, delayed for nearly two years, comes at a time when reconciliation with Kurds has dominated the headlines. The Kurdish politicians' decision averts the possibility of interim elections in several cities in Turkey's mainly Kurdish southeast, an outcome that Erdoğan must have welcomed so that he does not face voters in the midst of the economic crisis. It also plays down the view, as the Economist put it, that “Banning the DTP has reinforced the belief of many Kurds that they can get change only through bullets, not the ballot box.” The party's closure has sparked violent street demonstrations in several towns and cities across Turkey and two Kurds died in the small town of Bulanık in the south-east, after a shopkeeper fired on protesters. Ethnic strife remains as a serious risk while the Government ponders what to do next. Turkey, however, still needs to grow out of banning political parties and politicians.
Don’t piss Sultan Ahmet off. The Turkish ambassador to the United States Nabi Şensoy quit a day after Erdoğan met Obama in Washington. While Şensoy’s abrupt resignation sparked speculation in Turkey of a dispute between the ambassador and the prime minister who reportedly was dissatisfied with the White House meeting, the Hürriyet Daily News reported that the resignation stemmed from an argument between Şensoy and foreign minister Ahmet Davutoğlu who was offended because he was excluded from the one-on-one meeting at the White House. The foreign minister is said to have accused Şensoy of not fulfilling the request his request that Davutoğlu be part of the meeting. Some observers noted that Davutoğlu wanted to have some face time with Obama to enlighten him with his vision of the world as he was not sure Erdoğan would be able to do it.
Everybody goes to Mersin¹… According to a government press release, elimination of visas for Turkish citizens visiting Syria, Jordan, Albania and Libya paved the way for a vast geography to become available for visa-free vacations and business! Last week, Brussels lifted visa requirements for citizens of Serbia, Montenegro and Macedonia while keeping similar requirements in place for Turkey. That seems to have been a wake-up call for the government. "It's unacceptable that certain Balkan countries that are in the initial stages of the membership process and have not begun negotiations have been given the Schengen privilege, while Turkey, considering the level that Turkish-EU relations have reached, has not," Davutoğlu said at a news conference.
Need to pay more than lip service? Hürriyet Daily News reported that Ankara has been shaken by remarks from Patriarch Bartholomew, who said he feels "crucified" and "second class" in Turkey. The patriarch complained about "discrimination" in Turkey in an interview he gave to U.S. television network CBS in May and aired last night on “60 Minutes.” Davutoğlu criticized the remarks of Orthodox Christianity’s spiritual leader as unacceptable. "We regard the use of the crucifixion simile as extremely unfortunate,” he said. Denying that the ruling AKP, discriminates among its citizens on religious grounds, Davutoğlu said, “If Patriarch Bartholomew I has complaints on this issue, he can convey them to the relevant authorities who will do whatever is necessary." Bartholomew said in the interview that he conveyed his concerns to the Prime Minister in person but no action was taken.
Temel and Hamdi were once running an airline… The Anatolia news agency reported that Hamdi Topçu was elected as the company's chairman of the board of directors to replace Karlıtekin.who resigned last week citing disagreements with the CEO, Temel Kotil. Topçu who has been on the board of the airline is a CPA and hails from Rize. Turkish Airlines has been expanding its network and buying more planes. Passengers volume grew 10.1 percent to 18.6 million in the first nine months of the year, while other carriers have scaled back flights.
Economic Developments
Towards recovery. Third-quarter gross domestic product contracted by 3.3 percent y-o-y, Turkstat reported. As EPA expected, Turkstat also reported that figures were revised downwards for the second quarter from previous estimate of 7 percent to 7.9 percent. In the first nine months of the year, the economy shrank 8.4 percent. The government has forecast the economy will shrink 6.0 percent while EPA expects the decline in the fourth quarter to be 0.3 percent and 6.5 percent for the year reflecting weak investment expenditures, slow consumer spending and shrinking profits in the banking sector. Many observers, however, believe that growth will turn positive in the fourth quarter mostly reflecting the base effect and better than expected industrial production figures.
To a jobless one? Unemployment figures released by Turkstat shows that unemployment rate remained unchanged in September, holding at 13.4 percent, the same figure recorded in August, which still represents a 2.7 percentage point rise over the same month of last year. Non-agricultural unemployment rate, monitored by EPA, declined to 16.9 percent in September from 17 percent in August. According to a report published by the Center for Economic and Social Research (BETAM) at Bahçeşehir University, TurkStat data indicate a moderate recovery in employment; however, the report asserts, when removing seasonal effects this recovery disappears. As a result, BETAM found that the non-agricultural unemployment rate increased from 18.3 percent in August to 18.5 percent in September.
Low sentiment. Consumer confidence index decreased to 78.4 in November from 80.5 in the previous month, Turkstat reported on Wednesday. The sub-index measuring the general economic situation at present slid to 69.5 in November from 72.6 in the preceding month while the sub-index measuring the expectations for general economic situation in the next three months fell to 73.5 from 76.2.
¹ from the Turkish saying: “Everybody goes to Mersin, we go in the opposite direction.”

December 6, 2009

Turkey – Review of Political and Economic Developments
December 6, 2009
Political Developments
Mr. Erdoğan goes to Washington. Erdoğan's visit comes at a time when Turkey finds itself stretched on a number of fronts requiring U.S support for Armenia, Karabakh, Northern Iraq and Cyprus. He is also likely to try talking “sense” into the Administration on its Iran policy and end up hearing an earful in return. As an FT piece put, the visit is “intended to dispel suspicions of an eastwards drift in Turkey’s foreign policy, and show its value as a partner in addressing regional challenges – from stabilising Iraq to ending frozen conflicts in the Caucasus or containing Iran’s nuclear ambitions.”
What is the rush? Davutoğlu who featured prominently in the headlines last week told in an interview for the Newsweek that he expected Turkey to be an EU member by 2023. Considering that 2023 is fourteen years from today, Davutoğlu and the government are clearly not in a hurry to conclude the accession process. They are also being helped by opposition of France and Germany to Turkey’s membership. It may even become a moot issue if EU cannot manage to avoid imploding during Davutoğlu’s time horizon. According to the Newsweek, “What scares Washington most is the suspicion that Ankara's new attitude [in foreign policy] may be driven less by the practical pursuit of Turkey's national interest than by thinly concealed Islamist ideology.”
Questioning the brass. The former heads of the army, the air force and the navy, respectively Aytaç Yalman, İbrahim Fırtına and Özden Örnek were released after testifying for several hours to Ergenekon prosecutors on Saturday. The fact that they were not arrested seems to point out to weak evidence that the prosecution has and changes the nature of the charges in the second Ergenekon indictment for coup plotting. It may also reflect concerns about the military’s reaction to being subjected to a systematic campaign of weakening by the pro-Government media.
Kidding, right? Culture and Tourism Minister Ertuğrul Günay says PM Erdoğan could receive a Nobel Prize for his administration’s economic and democratic work. His coziness with Al Bashir should also strengthen the claim.
Too many risks. The steps that the AKP government has been taking on both domestic and foreign policy fronts seem to be stuck. Most of these initiatives are half baked and launched without any fall back strategies. On the domestic front, the Kurdish initiative that got bogged down to the size of Öcalan’s jail cell resulted in confusion at best and street riots throughout the southeastern cities. The Constitution Court’s session next week to decide on the fate of the Democratic Society Party (DTP), the Kurdish Party with 21 deputies in the parliament has added to the tensions. A closure verdict will set the clocks back and step up tensions. With the Pandora’s Box open and perplexed by the public reaction from both Turkish and Kurdish sides, the Government is in a bind without any clue about how to get out. The Ergenekon investigation is in total disarray without an exit strategy. Heavy coverage of the investigation by the pro-AKP media with a daily stream of leaks has further chipped away the credibility of the process. Turned into a political vendetta with counter-investigations of charges wire tapping the members of judiciary, it keeps adding to political tensions and polarizing the country. The tab for inter-institution conflict went up one more notch with the decision of the Council of State to strike down a regulation that eliminated differential treatment of high school graduates and vocational school (for some reason, İmam Hatip schools are considered vocational) for college admission. On the foreign front, the Armenia opening has not moved forward with the Karabakh issue hanging loose, with Erdoğan desperately seeking Obama’s help this week in Washington. The zero-conflict with the neighbors policy ended up eroding Turkey-Israel relations to a point that Turkey was ejected from its self-appointed mediator role between Syria and Israel. It seems that the Government’s obsession to mediate, under the thinly disguised veil of an Islamic country, is insatiable; last week, it was reported that the Turkish Government has accepted an invitation from Philippine government to take part in the International Contact Group (ICG), a body that is being set up to break the deadlock in the peace talks between the Philippine government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF). Mediating between the Martians and Ceresians, next? In terms of natural gas pipelines, after all the toing and froing, there is the Nabucco mess on the table and uncompleted negotiations for Turkey’s imports of Azeri gas. On the EU accession, no significant progress has been made while hiding behind the convenient excuse of Sarkozy’s and Merkel’s positions. And the list goes on. The point here is that Turkey has put too many irons in the fire that pose serious risks of instability at home and loss of credibility abroad without any visible signs for the appreciation of what they entail.
Economic Developments
Against the foregoing, Fitch Ratings upgraded Turkey’s long-term foreign currency Issuer Default Rating (IDR) to 'BB+' from 'BB-'. In its statement, Fitch said "The upgrade reflects Turkey's relative resilience to the severe stress test of the global financial crisis and some easing in prior acute constraints related to inflation, external finances and political risk." It also added that “Political risk also weighs on Turkey's sovereign ratings. But the risk of severe political instability has declined since 2007-2008, in Fitch's view.” Moody’s Investors Service rates Turkey’s debt at “Ba3,” three steps below investment grade and Standard & Poor’s applies an equivalent “BB-.” Moody’s raised its outlook to “positive” in September, indicating it may upgrade its recommendation. S&P increased its outlook to stable from negative later that month. Fitch now rates Turkey the same as Latvia, Romania, Macedonia and Azerbaijan.
Yeah, right. Last week, the IMF balloon was floated once again, this time by Ali Babacan who so far had a better credibility than the rest of his colleagues. Babacan told reporters that Turkey was through the worst of its economic contraction, 2009 foreign borrowing was at an end and the government was still talking to the IMF about a new stand-by deal. ISE-100 gained 14.3 percent in the week, made up the losses from the previous three weeks.
Weak spot. Turkish multinational enterprises, or MNEs, have expanded their foreign investment in the last several years, yet much of that progress has been reversed due to the global turmoil, according to a study released Thursday by Kadir Has University (KHU), the Foreign Economic Relations Board (DEIK), and the Vale Columbia Center on Sustainable International Investment (VCC). Turkish MNEs have become significant investors in global markets, the survey said, though it tempered this report by adding that all these gains were “neutralized, if not reversed, by the current global economic contraction.” While Turkey ranked 72nd among all outward-investing countries, recent data cast a dark shadow over the previous years’ performance. The study noted that the current global economic contraction has had a severely negative impact on Turkey’s performance. An interesting point emerging from the study is the very low level exposure of Turkish investors in other countries. For the seventeenth largest economy in the world, ranking only 72nd among all outward-investing countries shows limited progress and reticence in globalizing and linking up with production chains elsewhere for Turkey’s investors.
Briefly:
October export figures showed a 3.9 percent increase (y-o-y) to $10.1 billion after twelve months of consecutive decline, according to Turkstat. Imports declined 15.2 percent (y-o-y) to $12.7 billion, brining the trade deficit to $29.6 billion, 53.4 percent below its 2008 level. Exports to Russia and UAE – once prime destinations of Turkey’s exports – declined 55 percent and 68 percent respectively during the first ten months of 2009.
· Turkstat’s data show that the headline inflation rose to 5.5 percent from 5.1 percent in October, above expectations. Inflation will probably accelerate to 6.3 percent in 12 months’ time, according to a central bank survey of businesses and economists published on Nov. 20. The Central Bank’s inflation target is 7.5 percent in 2009 and 6.5 percent in 2010.
· Construction permits issued during January-October 2009 show a 19.6 percent decline in area and 25.1 decline in value compared to a year earlier.
Nothing to be complacent about. According the poverty statistics released by Turkstat, 17.1 percent of the population lived below the complete poverty line in 2008. While the poverty rate declined significantly from 30 percent in 2002 to 17.8 percent in 2006 reflecting rapid economic growth enjoyed during the post-2001 crisis period, it has stagnated at the 17 percent level since 2006 when the economy started stuttering. It is very likely that poverty worsened significantly during 2009 with steep increases in the number of jobless and economic decline. Another aspect of the poverty in Turkey is the stark contrast between the urban and rural profiles. While the overall poverty rate declined until 2006, rural poverty rate increased from 34 percent in 2002 to 40 percent in 2004 and remained around 34 percent in 2007 and 2008. A third of rural population living under poverty should be a major concern for the Government. Data also show that increases in the relative poverty since 2006 point out to worsening income distribution.

November 23, 2009

Turkey – Review of Political and Economic Developments

November 23, 2009

A number of recent political developments, some of which are highlighted below, paint a bleak picture of the deteriorating political stability in Turkey. The impunity and callousness with which the AKP leadership is demonstrating in addressing a very critical and heavy political agenda along with the nonsensical positions that the two large opposition parties have locked themselves into have stymied any hopes for moving forward on any of these issues whether domestic or external. For a government that claims to be championing democratic reforms, ordering wiretapping of political opponents is hardly to way to establish credibility. Fringes on both sides of the aisle – that probably would account for thirty percent of the electorate – who hijacked the political agenda will need to realize that political stability is going to be critical in getting of the economic crisis during the next eighteen to twenty four months. Ankara is totally oblivious to the discrepancy between the image it wants to project abroad and how domestic political scene in Turkey is seen from outside. It needs to focus on one or two key issues as it builds a track record for becoming a regional power broker. It will not happen by behaving like a five year old in a candy shop. A comparison of the indices for the equity markets in Turkey and emerging markets during the last four weeks is a good indicator of investors’ perception of the political risks in Turkey.

Political Developments

Imam from Of[1]. Erdoğan’s speech to the parliament on the “Kurdish Initiative” was not whole lot different than that of the audio skid of the Imam from Of. Started out in a reconciliatory tone, he gradually lost his temper, became insulting that led CHP ranks to storm out of the session. What a way to build consensus!

Another classic. During Erdoğan’s speech, there was an amusing instant when an opposition MP shouted that the high speed train that Erdoğan was taking credit for putting into service was derailed earlier that day near Eskişehir. Erdoğan either had no clue that there was actually a derailment earlier that day, or he chose not to acknowledge it. He shouted back at the MP: ”Nothing is derailed. You are derailed”. It exactly sounded like how he dealt with the economic crisis. “What crisis?”

War without weapons The recent episodes of wiretapping members of the judiciary, including the chief public prosecutor of the İstanbul province who is nominally in charge of the Ergenekon indictments at the request of the Ministry of Justice have added to the increasing political tension in the country and reminded the markets of the political risks that were overlooked for some time. Last week shares, the lira and bonds were hit by fears that a row over a probe into government-sanctioned wiretapping of judges and prosecutors could eventually result in a bid to ban the ruling AK Party. Among the judges who were eavesdropped is the presiding judge for the fourth criminal court of Bursa who sentenced the columnist for the AKP-supporter daily Vakit and pedophile Hüseyin Üzmez to 15 years. While Erdoğan and the AKP leadership have been trying to distance themselves from the Justice Ministry’s wiretapping request that covered 56 judges and prosecutors who are perceived to be secularists and opposition to the government, the political warfare between the AKP and those institutions that have not yet been subjugated has intensified and unlikely to settle down. Also last week, the Prime Minister’s office said that an investigation was under way got a suspected plot by Naval officers to attack non-Muslim minorities to discredit the ruling Islamist-rooted AK Party. The alleged "Cage Operation Action Plan" involved bomb attacks, kidnappings and assassinations against non-Muslims, which would then be blamed on Islamist militants, another AKP-supporter daily Zaman reported on Friday in a front page article headlined: "A plan to finish Turkey off.”

Come on. Talking to an AKP retreat in Kızılcahamam, Erdoğan, in an effort to distance himself from the wiretapping accusations, told his flock said that “he is a prime minister who is also eavesdropped and if he could find a way to stop all this… For a PM who has been ruling for the last seven years, this is either an admission of total incompetence or hypocrisy par excellence. The Economist last week concluded its piece on wiretappings: “The row has little to do with justice. Rather, it is another twist in the long-running power struggle between Mr Erdogan and his mildly Islamist party, and an old guard led by the generals that has steadily lost ground. The army’s standing has been damaged by a slew of leaked documents detailing plans to foment chaos and topple the government. AK is hitting back with new laws pruning the army’s powers. The secret wiretaps may be just another weapon in this political fight.” EPA disagrees with these views that sound like an apology for AKP. The Government is making mockery of the rule of law in the country and playing the victim at the same time.

A sober analysis of the Ergenekon entitled “Between Fact And Fantasy: Turkey’s Ergenekon Investigation” by Gareth Jenkins concludes that “[Ergenekon] … could have provided an opportunity for the establishment of an independent truth commission which could perhaps have enabled Turks – including both secular nationalists and Islamists – to come to terms with the realities of recent Turkish history. But, in the short-term, a more pressing concern is not the wasted opportunity for Turkey to confront its past but what the Ergenekon investigation might be saying about its future, and the disturbing questions it raises about the prospects for democracy and the rule of law in the country.”

Was it also Ergenekon? Some ceiling tiles of the courtroom where the Ergenekon trials are held collapsed on the bench last week. The courtroom was converted less than six months ago to accommodate some 200 defendants from what was supposed to be built as a gym in the Silivri Prison. While no one was hurt and the hearings were suspended for two days to allow for repairs, it makes one wonder about the contracting and quality control procedures for contracts of the Government, in this particular case of the Ministry of Justice.

Sliding back. Turkey's ranking fell three places to 61st from 58th in 2008 according to the 2009 Corruption Perception Index (CPI) that measures domestic public sector corruption and compiled by the Transparency International. Turkey stood one place after Cuba and one place before Italy. Qatar ranks the 22nd, UAE the 30th and Israel the 22nd fared better than Turkey. Iraq ranked 176th, Uzbekistan 174th, Turkmenistan and Iran 168th, Kyrgyz Republic 162nd, Tajikistan 158th, Russia 146th, Azerbaijan 143rd, Armenia and Kazakhstan 120th out of 180 countries.

Whirling Dervish or Minister? Turkey hurled itself into the Iranian nuclear standoff, offering an unsolicited role to intermediate once again. The offer is part of Turkey's increasingly active role in the region, Ahmet Davutoğlu told Gulf News in an interview. Davutoğlu was in Spain, Iran and Kabul in the last ten days, travelling around at a dizzying pace, although it is not clear whether the Government thinks through the potential risks of what they are offering. Turkey does not have the infrastructure to store close to a ton of low-grade uranium. In the absence of secure storage facilities that would cost several hundred million dollars, trying to store it in Küçükçekmece, in the midst of greater İstanbul and millions of people, can at best be described irresponsible. The neo-Ottomanesque obsession to lead and intermediate in the region what Davutoğlu describes as "activism" in the Turkish foreign policy is already suffering from lack of credibility. Under Netanyahu, Israel has ruled out resuming Turkish-mediated talks with Syria, insisting that any new contacts must be direct. "On this issue (of mediation), Israel's stance is that it doesn't trust us," Erdoğan told a news conference in Rome, where he was attending a U.N. food summit. Perhaps it is time now to think through a sound foreign policy and a strategy to implement it.

Oh, well! "Turkey is not a part of Europe and will never be part of Europe. An expansion of the EU to include Turkey cannot be considered as just another expansion as in the past. The universal values which are in force in Europe, and which are fundamental values of Christianity, will loose vigour with the entry of a large Islamic country such as Turkey" Van Rompuy, the President-elect of EU said during a meeting of the Council of Europe on the subject of Turkey's possible entry into the EU, held in the Belgian parliament on December, 2004.
Ever do anything right? The Turkish State Council last week annulled the tender in which only one bidder – a consortium made up of Inter RAO, Atomstroiexport and Turkey's Park Teknik – participated. The tender was regarded by many as far from a real competition and failed to cover expectations related to power pricing.

In a great hurry? Defense Minister Vecdi Gönül issued an ultimatum on Saturday to Israeli industries, demanding they supply 10 long-awaited unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to Turkey within 50 days. CNN Turk quoted Gönül as saying that he had sent a letter to Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) and Elbit Systems to fulfill the $183 million deal - signed in 2005 - within 50 days. If the UAVs were not supplied, Gönül said he would cancel the tender. Israeli officials said that the delays were the result of Turkish demands to install additional technology on the aircraft that is too heavy for them to carry. IAI and Elbit usually sell their UAVs with electro-optic sensors, but in this case the Turks wanted to install their own systems that turned out to be weightier than the permitted payload.

A sad story. In the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA ), an internationally standardized triennial assessment of 15-year-old school children's children's performance, Turkey ranked at the bottom among the OECD countries, just above Mexico. PISA assesses how far students near the end of compulsory education have acquired some of the knowledge and skills that are essential for full participation in society. In all cycles, the domains of reading, mathematical and scientific literacy are covered not merely in terms of mastery of the school curriculum, but in terms of important knowledge and skills needed in adult life. While the 2009 results are not yet available, the results of the assessment carried out in 2006 reveals a bleak picture for the education outcomes in Turkey. In all three assessment categories – mathematics, science and reading, Turkey ranked 29th out of the 30 OECD countries. Also in all three categories, about two third of the students performed at level 2 or below – about basic minimum proficiency to function in the society- out of six levels.

Economic Developments

Debt piles up. Central Government’s total debt reached TL 438 billion at end-October, increasing TL 64.6 billion (or about 6 percent GDP) in the last twelve months. According to the Central Bank, Turkey’s private sector had total foreign-denominated debt of $132.2 billion at end-September.

Watch Out. BDDK Chairman Tevfik Bilgin said this year's bank profits would likely be the highest for the next few years and 2010 would be a difficult year. He warned once the easing cycle has ended banks will face lower net interest margins and profits.
Where is the beef? Last week, CHP the main opposition party published a report on the economic crisis. While the report provides a good analysis of the recent economic developments and the impact of the crisis, it does not have anything on what should be done and a set of policies that CHP would recommend to get out of the crisis. Hard to imagine that CHP has no economic program, but then again?

Keeps increasing, August unemployment data shows that the rate of non-agricultural unemployment rose to 17 percent, compared with the 12.9 percent a year ago. While the Turkstat estimates the number of unemployed at 3.4 million at end-August, many analysts believe that it is closer to 6.3 million.
Tobin, who? Central Bank expects 2010 inflation to be below the official 6.5 percent target, Governor Yılmaz told a conference on Friday. He said that interest rates would remain at current levels for a long period, and said that Turkey had no plans to impose capital controls to protect the economy as it recovers from recession.

On a roll. The Monetary Policy Committee cut the policy borrowing rate 25 bp to 6.50 percent, while lending rate is decreased from 9.25 percent to 9 percent. It noted “that the cumulative policy rate cuts implemented since November 2008 and the improvements in global risk perceptions have started to exert favorable effects on credit markets. However, lingering problems across the global economy are not resolved completely and there are still uncertainties regarding the strength of the recovery. Taking these factors into account, the Committee has reiterated that it would be necessary for the monetary policy to maintain an easing bias for a long period of time.” There is, however, no basis to claim that the 1100 basis points cut in the policy rates in the last twelve months has “started to exert favorable effects on credit markets”. Bank credit only declined 4.4 percent in real terms during the same period

Briefly:

· Reuters reported that Austrian energy group OMV has dropped its plan to take full control of Petrol Ofisi after warning that a row between the Turkish group's owner and local authorities could delay such a deal. OMV said in August it wanted to increase its 42 percent stake in the petrol retailer to help develop Turkey its third strategic centre, after Austria and Romania. Turkey's only oil refiner said late on Wednesday exports were halved to 2.8 million tons during the first 10 months of the year. Domestic sales fell 9 percent to 18.2 million tons.
· German media giant Axel Springer said on Thursday it had agreed to buy a 29-percent stake in Turkey's biggest independent media group Doğan for €161 million ($239 million), The new arrangement is however contingent on tax and regulatory proceedings brought against Doğan by Turkey's Radio and Television Supreme Council (RTÜK) being successfully resolved, Springer added.

November 9, 2009

Turkey – Review of Political and Economic Developments
November 9, 2009

Political Developments

Finally!  The merger of DP and ANAP, the two center-right opposition parties both of which had experienced parliamentary majority individually in the not-so-distant past but were decimated during the 2007 general elections after botching up their merger, finally took place last week. With the former chairperson of ANAP Mesut Yılmaz joining DP, it will be also represented in the parliament. Whether the new improved DP will be able to make inroads into AKPs base remains to be seen, but it will have to  make a concerted effort to attract youth vote to be relevant in the next decade.

Term limits? What is that? Devlet Bahçeli was reelected as the chairperson of the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) for a sixth term after the by-laws of the party was amended to eliminate term limits at a party convention. The convention was preceded by harsh rhetoric between the MHP and AKP leaderships on alleged interference of AKP to “undermine and disrupt” the MHP congress. In his two hour acceptance speech, Bahçeli criticized the AKP for its Islamic discourse and declared the AKP’s efforts to protect the Palestinians an artificial attempt.

In the risk group?  The death toll from swine flu climbed to 27 on Sunday as the vaccination campaign was mired in a bizarre political rant last week.  Speaking at his party’s parliamentary group meeting on Tuesday, Erdoğan said people should make their own decision on whether to get the vaccine after publicly chiding Minister of Health Recep Akdağ who received his shot in front of TV cameras for being proactive. The Turkish Doctors’ Union (TTB) announced on Wednesday in a written statement that Erdoğan’s refusal to get vaccinated resulted in an "irreparable" blow to the Health Ministry's credibility and cast doubt on "how competent [the government] will be in managing a nationwide pandemic." It turns out that Erdoğan was reacting to a statement attributed to Akdağ – later denied – that the President and Prime Minister would also get vaccinated. Since neither of them fits into any of the risk groups, the fact that their vaccination ever became an issue should be a cause of concern for the allocation and distribution of vaccines that are in short supply. Erdoğan's remarks further confused the public opinion over the safety of the vaccine. It turns out that Turkey ordered batch vaccines that contain thimerosal which is a mercury-based preservative that has been phased out of childhood immunizations since 2001 due to concerns that it may be linked to autism. Thimerosal-free vaccines are provided in single-dose shots that have not so far been available in Turkey.
“Why are they getting involved?”  Sudanese President Al-Bashir was set to attend a meeting of the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) in Istanbul on the weekend. He did not show up on Sunday with the rest of the Sudanese delegation and the Sudanese government said that he cancelled the trip to deal with the coalition discussions in Khartoum. He is wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity in Darfur. The European Union asked Turkey to reassess its invitation to al-Bashir, the Reuters news agency reported Friday, citing an anonymous Foreign Ministry source. Last year, the Government hosted al-Bashir twice: a bilateral visit in January and then at multilateral cooperation talks with African leaders in August. Gül responded to journalists’ inquiries later on Friday about reconsidering al-Bashir’s visit, the Anatolia news agency reported. “This is a regional meeting, and as members of international organizations we understand it as such,” he said. “Therefore, we will treat all members equally.” “Why are they getting involved?” he asked. You really don’t get it, do you??

“You are it” Erdoğan’s resourcefulness never ceases to amaze me. During a TV interview Sunday, he was saying that those who have not been to Darfur shouldn’t talk. He was there and he didn’t see anything wrong. Do people have to play tag with you? Really, if you have been to Darfur – and you were when you were not supposed to for the same reasons as today- and have not seen the human misery that was caused by the civil war, you should really get your eyes examined or get your cataracts removed.

What/Who is genetically modified? New regulations regarding controls for genetically modified organisms, or GMOs issued last week created quite a stir in Turkey. These regulations stipulate that says GM-food should be controlled and should have necessary permission before entering the market. However, it also says that if food or feed contains GMO less than 0.9 percent, it will be “treated as GM-food.”  Regulation and labeling of GM food and feed, a very controversial subject in Europe became a confused and convoluted debate in Turkey along the lines of the opposition and the ruling party. Opponents claim that was “prepared by GMO companies,” and those lax regulations would create irreversible genetic pollution in Turkey. Another concern is that a GMO-laced agriculture would jeopardize exports of agricultural products to European countries with stricter regulations.

Economic Developments

Different strokes… While there are signs of fragile recovery in the global economy, recent macroeconomic forecasts for Turkey are mixed. They cover a range of 1.5 percent to 3.7 percent for growth prospects in 2010. For 2009, GDP decline estimates range between 5.5 percent and 6.5 percent with the exception of EPA’s own estimate of 7.8 percent.


Briefly

Trade data for September showed continued declines in exports and imports that registered 33.6 percent and 30.4 percent y-o-y respectively. Trade deficit was $27 billion for the January-September period, compared to $58.4 billion for the same period in 2008. On a bright note, however, export figures provided by the Turkish Exporters Assembly (TİM) showed that exports in October were up 4.6 percent y-o-y.
Headline inflation was up 5.1 percent (y-o-y) in October while the core inflation (measured by Index D) rose 4.6 percent.

According to data released by the Treasury, non-tax revenues during the first nine months of the year was TL 7 billion compared to TL 7.9 billion for the whole year in 2008, Of this, TL 1.8 billion was from 3G license payments – non-replicable- and TL 2.1 billion as an installment payment from the Telecom privatization.
“Fall Grid Sale” Turkey will raise $1.2 billion by selling three power grids on Friday, although payments are likely to come next year.  Eti Gümüş, owned by Yıldızlar SSS Holding, agreed to pay $485 million for the Osmangazi network in the west, where it owns a ceramic plant. Çalık Holding, which has interests in energy and media, bid $441.5 million for the northern Yeşilırmak grid. Aksa bought the northern Çoruh grid for $227 million.  Çalık may bid in other electricity sales too, Saim Dinç, chief executive of Çalık Enerji, told reporters after the second auction while the company is still evaluating how to pay for the Yeşilırmak purchase. Çalık Holding, managed by Erdoğan’s son-in-law, purchased for  $1.25 billion Turkey’s second-biggest media group in a non-competitive bid last year that was financed  loans from state-run banks Halkbank and Vakıfbank along with financing from Qatar. Çalık  and Italy’s ENI SpA are planning to build an oil pipeline linking Samsun with the Mediterranean coast at Ceyhan. The asset sales agency said Friday it plans to sell four more grids next week, without naming them. “Crede in Turchia” UniCredit plans to provide $6 billion annually within five years for energy, transportation and infrastructure projects in Turkey, said Vittorio Ogliengo, a member of Unicredit’s executive management committee. Commenting on the global financial crisis and UniCredit’s position in Turkey, Ogliengo said, “We have been in Turkey during the crisis, and remained here even during the worst times. After all, we have overcome the bottom. Over this period, we have continued investing in Kyrgyzstan, Bulgaria, Baltics, Kazakhstan and Russia. We never considered leaving any of them during the crisis.” Now that the institution has overcome the crisis and gained much experience, it is not likely to leave these markets due to other new developments, he said. “Such [an exit] debate cannot be possible particularly for Turkey. I expect 2010 will be better and open to developments for Turkey,” he said, clearly refuting some rumors that UniCredit whose joint venture with the Koç Group is the majority shareholder of Yapı Kredi would leave Turkey due to the crisis.

Will need every drop. The special consumption tax (ÖTV) levied on tobacco products is expected to rise in 2010 according to Minister Şimşek, Ministry officials told the Anatolia news agency that they expect to collect TL 12 billion from the tobacco industry this year. In the 2010 budget, the government expects to collect TL 16.4 billion liras in tobacco-based ÖTV. The implied 41.5 percent increase in the ÖTV collected from tobacco products is seen as a harbinger of other tax hikes to finance the large budget deficit foreseen in 2010..

October 26, 2009

Turkey – Review of Political and Economic Developments

October 26, 2009

Political Developments

The Grand Energy Bazaar. It looks like that Turkey has traded the Nabucco pipeline for Russia’s participation in the Samsun-Ceyhan Pipeline (SCP) to transport oil from the Black Sea coast to the Mediterranean port. In the aftermath of Putin’s August 6 visit to Turkey during which Berlusconi also dropped in. Turkey has agreed to support the South Stream - a joint venture between Russia's Gazprom and Italy's ENI - would transport Russian gas under the Black Sea to Bulgaria and on to central and southern Europe. SCP will be carried out by the Trans-Anatolian Pipeline Company (TAPCO), a joint enterprise of the Çalık Energy and ENI, each controlling a 50 percent stake. In addition to Transneft and Rusneft that will provide the crude for the pipeline, Nazarbayev also offered Kazakhstan’s support to SCP during his visit to Turkey last week. There are, however, concerns and questions about how these deals are conducted and who benefits from them. Among these concerns are the awarding contracts and licenses to “cronies” in a non-transparent manner, the ties between the officials and the Turkish partner of the SCP, Çalık Group whose CEO is Berat Albayrak, Erdoğan’s son-in-law. Adding to these concerns are the provide financial incentives for infrastructure investments by the private sector that included specific provisions favoring the investments of the Çalık Group. On the other hand, disagreements on the transit fees that Turkey is demanding resulted in Aliyev stating that Azerbaijan now has three priority options to export Caspian gas: laying a gas pipeline to Iran, the construction of facilities for the liquefaction of natural gas in the Black Sea, or the pumping capacity through the territory of Russia. Turkmenistan has also been busy to build the pipeline to China with an initial 40 bcm capacity and expand its exports to Iran. There is more to the energy deals that the Putin-Erdoğan-Berlusconi troika have cut beyond oil and gas. Turkey’s nuclear projects are/will become part of them.

A bag of figs…[1] It seems that the neo-Ottoman policy initiatives of the AKP government have already started to run into snags.

·         The reaction in Baku to the rapprochement with Armenia has been strong. Turkish flags have been taken down in the city and Aliyev, speaking at a nationally televised cabinet meeting on October 16, suggested his country might stop selling Turkey natural gas at a discounted price. Turkey’s decision to drop Nabucco and support the South Stream has also ticked Baku off.   Azeris are now actively exploring alternative outlets to sell their gas bypassing Turkey. Last week, Turkey’s parliament began debating ratification of protocols that led to the opposition parties walking out of the chamber in protest against the deal that they argue compromises Turkey’s national interests. Erdoğan & Co. are now stuck between the need to pay lip service to Azerbaijan with the not-so-useful "one nation-two states" slogan and the need to move forward with reconciliation process. It is obvious that the Turkish side has not done its homework with the Azeris and thought that it can bully its way. On the other hand, Armenia considers that failing to go through with the reconciliation will put another stumbling block to Turkey’s path to its EU accession and that Turkey has more to lose if there is a breakdown,

·         The growing public rift between Turkey and Israel seems to have been, in part, the result of Erdoğan’s and Davutoğlu’s frustration with their mediation efforts between Syria and Israel. Another reason is said to be Israeli decision to prevent Davutoğlu crossing into Gaza - the French Foreign Minister was also prevented from crossing into the Gaza and was furious.  The fact that US-Israeli relations are at a low ebb should not have encouraged Erdoğan & Co. to dispense cheap populism in the domestic front. Genuine concerns about large number of civilian deaths should have made him also to take a stand against the conduct of the US and Coalition forces in Iraq during the last seven years. Lesser heroics are, however, signs of miscalculated opportunism. A more effective of way of putting pressure on Israel is to support the Goldstone Report’s recommendation calling for full and good-faith investigations, both in Israel and in Gaza by Hamas at the UN.

It is clear that these developments reflect a radical change in foreign policy rather than a “conjectural realignment” as the apologists for AKP are trying to frame them.  While both reestablishing diplomatic relations with Armenia and letting Israel know the concerns that Turkey has for its Gaza policies are in themselves the right things to do, the problems arise from the style with which they are being handled and the uncalled for arrogance of Ottoman wannabes.  Erdoğan who considers himself as the grand master of oriental cunning of the Middle East and Balkans and Davutoğlu who keeps egging him on still seem to be oblivious to the fact that they lack a credible track record of resolving conflicts in their own country - on the contrary, AKP fans  the fire on many political conflicts- that would earn them a seat at the regional negotiation tables, not as a party but as an honest broker.

Pandora’s box   After several months of talking about an unarticulated plan, parts of the roadmap for Erdoğan’s “Kurdish Initiative” emerged in a letter brought back by 34 repatriated PKK rebels who were welcomed by thousands of Kurds in a series of village-wedding like ceremonies. The process, essentially managed by Öcalan, included a second group of PKK rebels returning from European exiles has been temporarily halted by Erdoğan who appears to be perturbed by the public reaction. Having used his office as a bully pulpit, he might now be better served by an open discussion of what the government has in mind to bring people to the same page, if not reach consensus.  At the same time, opposition leaders who have been crying  treason need to assume responsibility to avoid taking destructive positions.  Now that Pandora’s box is open, it is in the interest of everyone in the country to let the hope come out of the jar as well.

Surprising? Turkey lost 20 places in the ranking of the world press freedom index that Reporters Without Borders compiles every year compared to 2008. Ranked 122nd, Turkey is now below Tajikistan (113), Armenia(111), Israel(93), Kuwait(60). The United States has climbed 16 places in the rankings, from 36th to 20th reflecting the environment created by the Obama presidency.
Ouch. According to the Human Development Report released by the UNDP last month, Turkey’s rank in the Human Development Index slipped by one place from 78th to 79th place between 2006 and 2007. What is more worrisome is that Turkey slipped 11 places in the ranking of the Gender Empowerment Measure from 90th to 101th place between 2005 and 2007, placing it just below Azerbaijan (100) and just above Iran(103).

Economic Developments

Budget deficit widens. In the first nine months of the year, the budget deficit stood at TL 40.8 billion, surging from TL 4.8 billion in the same period a year earlier. The primary balance amounted to TL 4.7 billion in the January-September period, down from TL 36.5 billion a year earlier.
Debt grows. The Central Government’s debt rose TL 50.8 billion ($ 34.9 billion) to TL 431.1 billion during the first nine months of 2009. Increase in domestic debt (TL 45.8 billion) was the principal source of deficit financing during this period. More worrisome is the rate with which the Government borrows. Compared to a year earlier, the Central Government’s total debt increased by TL 77 billion or 21.9 percent from TL 353.7 billion at end-September 2008. For an economy that is contracting by about 7 percent, increasing its debt stock by more than a fifth is not responsible economic management.  According to EPA’s estimates, total debt would reach TL 452 billion or 47.9 percent of GDP at end-2009.

Not a whole lot better in 2010. The details of the 2010 budget proposal were announced by Finance Minister Mehmet Şimşek last week, forecasting expenditures around TL 286.9 billion (7 percent increase), the revenues around TL 236.7 billion (16 percent increase) and deficit around TL 50.1 billion. Şimşek also reiterated the government economic growth expectation of 3.5 percent in 2010, and said it was targeting 10.4 billion lira in privatization revenues next year. He also said the government was not thinking of increasing taxes at the moment.

In EPA’s view, the Government’s budget proposal is overly optimistic on the revenue side and too expansionary on the expenditure side.  Given the medium-term framework that the Government recently announced, the budget presents a number of internal inconsistencies, including tax revenues that 3.5 percent real growth and 5.3 percent inflation can generate and an unsustainable fiscal picture. The fiscal space that the Government has is therefore extremely limited given the borrowing prospects and lack of any significant structural reforms on the tax side. Serious expenditure compression and tax increases are likely to take place during its implementation, both of which are hard pills to swallow for a ruling party going into elections the following year.

More unemployed. According to Turkstat, unemployment rate for July was 12.8 percent while the non-agricultural unemployment rate, a more meaningful indicator of the labor markets in Turkey monitored by EPA, was 16.3 percent. Turkstat data also showed that the number of unemployed increased by 842 thousand to 3.3 million since July 2008. Turkish Employment Organization (İŞKUR) data for September show a much bleaker picture with the number of registered unemployed more than doubling to 1.626 million and tripling of monthly employment application y-o-y to 127 thousand.