Saturday, August 4, 2012
Gatestone Update :: David P. Goldman: Turkey's trade deficit reveals an economy in deep trouble
by David P.
Goldman • Aug 3, 2012 at 10:07 am
I've been hammering away at Turkey's credit
bubble problem for the past eight months: consumer lending is still growing at
a nearly 30% annual rate, after dipping into the teens earlier this year (I am
annualizing the 3-month growth rate). But the trade data just released for June
show a slowing domestic economy.
With the economy clearly slowing, where are all the loans going? The answer
is indicated by the extremely high interest rates charged by Turkish banks:
At 18% interest, consumers have to borrow to pay the interest on previous
loans. In other words Turkish banks are capitalizing interest, and booking
profits on loans that would go sour if they stopped lending additional money to
borrowers to pay the interest. The much-vaunted strength of Turkey's banks
(whose stock prices recovered smartly this year) appears to be an illusion.
The economic outlook isn't good.
From the Financial Times'
Beyond Brics blog:
At first glance, newly released figures for Turkey's foreign trade suggest
the country's economy is holding up well despite the travails of its neighbours
in Europe.
But as ever the devil is in the detail and hidden away in the numbers are
some more uncomfortable indications that darker days lie ahead for the Turkish
economy.
Figures from TUIK, the statistics office, show a 30 per cent reduction in
Turkey's trade deficit, from $10.3bn in June 2011 to $7.2bn in June this year.
Other figures from TIM, the Turkish exporters' association, show exports for
the 12 months to July reaching $142.6bn, a healthy 12.3 per cent up on the
previous twelve months.
Taken together, the two sets of figures could suggest continued success for
Turkey's exporters, while Turkish consumers have reined in their love of
expensive imported goods.
But dig a little deeper…
To begin with, according to TIM's figures for July, Turkish exports for the
month actually fell by 5.5 per cent over July 2011 while both TIM and TUIK show
worrying falls in exports to Turkey's core European markets.
According to TUIK, Turkey's exports to the EU dropped from 48.2 per cent of
the total in June 2011 to only 37.1 per cent this year. TIM's data suggest a
drop from 47.7 per cent in July last year to 40.3 per cent.
According to TIM, the bulk of the fall came in two keys sectors: automotive,
which saw exports in July plunge 22.3 per cent; and ready-to-wear textiles,
where exports in July fell by 12 per cent.
While the two organisations collate their figures in different ways the
outlook is clear: as Europe continues to sneeze, Turkey will catch a cold.
The picture is more worrying when the effect of the weakening euro is taken
into account, an effect which economy minister Zafer Caglayan estimates cost
the country $550m in July alone.
So far so bad. But according to Ozgur Altug, chief economist at Istanbul's
BCG Partners, the real bad news is hidden not in weakening export figures but
in the falling import figures – which helped contribute to fall in the trade
deficit and to a reduction Turkey's current account deficit from $77bn a year
ago to $67bn by the end of May this year.
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