Mainstream media is hardly covering this and is totally fatuous.
Comments
on Facebook are even worse and focus on the statement They
have 'their dollars,' we have 'our god'
Read
this for real analysis
How Turkey's Currency Crisis Came To Pass
10
August, 2018
President
Erdogan of Turkey often asserts that 'foreign powers' (meaning the
U.S.) want to bring him down. He says that the 'interest lobby'
(meaning (Jewish) bankers), wants to damage Turkey. He is somewhat
right on both points.
Since
last week the Turkish lira is on an extended down-slide. Today alone
it lost nearly 20% of its value. It will likely take the Turkish
economy with it and Erdogan need someone to blame for it.
But
while foreign powers and banks surely use the crisis for their own
aims, it its Erdogan's economic policy that is foremost to blame. The
long boom he created with borrowed foreign money is finally turning
into a bus.
Here
is a recap of how it came to this.
The larger political picture:
During
the U.S. induced 'Arab Spring' U.S. President Obama joined with Qatar
and Turkey in an attempt to install Muslim Brotherhood governments
throughout the Middle East. When Hillary Clinton left the position of
Secretary of State and John Kerry took over, the Obama administration
changed its position. It endorsed the coup against the elected
Egyptian President Morsi and it refrained from actively using the
U.S. military to bring the Syrian government down.
Especially
with regards to Syria Turkey was left holding the bag. Erdogan had
bet on the U.S. plan to overthrow the Syrian government. His
invitation of Syrian refugees and support of radical Islamists
fighting in Syria had cost a lot of money and brought a lot of
trouble with it. The Turkish trade route through Syria to the Gulf
countries was closed. Economic relations with Iran suffered.
Erdogan wanted to get something out of it.
But
U.S. policies had turned against him. The Gezi protests in 2013 had
all the signs of a U.S. color revolution attempt. They failed.
In 2014 the Obama administration began to support the Kurdish PKK/YPG
forces in Kobane. The PKK is a terrorist organization which tries to
create its own country in the eastern part of Turkey, north Syria and
north Iraq. The U.S. alliance with the Kurds created a PKK/YPG dagger
pointed at Turkey's underbelly.
In
response to a Turkish led attack on Latakia and Idleb in mid 2015
Russia deployed its forces to Syria. In hindsight it was the point
where Erdogan's game in Syria was over. The U.S. would not launch a
war against the nuclear armed Russia. Syria would not fall. But
Erdogan played on.
In
November 2015 the Turkish air defense ambushed and shot down a
Russian jet. Russia responded with
a total stop of all economic exchange with Turkey. These were
not the needle prick sanctions the U.S. often uses, but a total
abrupt end of all trade relations including Russian tourist visits in
Turkey. The economic damage for Turkey was huge. Erdogan had to
submit to Russia. Putin was gracious and allowed Erdogan to save his
face. The Russian government offered a lucrative pipeline deal and
other sweeteners. In mid 2016 the CIA arranged for a coup against
Erdogan but Russian intelligence warned Erdogan and the coup failed.
Flipping
Turkey from the "western" to the "eastern" camp
can be seen is as part of Russia's Black
Sea strategy. It
is repeat of a mid 19th-century plan executed under Tzar Nicholas I.
The current plan is so far successful. But it collides with the U.S.
plans for revive NATO for another Cold War. Thus the current U.S.
plan is to use Turkey's economy problems to finally bring Erdogan
down.
The larger economic picture:
Outside
of his country Erdogan is much disliked. His arrogance and autocratic
style do not leave a good impression. But within Turkey he had a very
successful career and continues to be supported by a majority of his
people. The reason behind this is the long economic boom he created.
In
2002, when Erdogan became prime minister, Turkey was recovering from
a recession. Erdogan's predecessor Kemal Derviş had implemented some
significant reforms. Erdogan took credit for the results. He
additionally discarded a number of cumbersome regulations and cleaned
up the bureaucracy. He invited foreign investment. The program worked
well. The economy grew at a fast pace and many Turks were pulled from
poverty. A few became rich. The early years of economic success under
his rule are remembered well. Inflation was steady at a relatively
low rate even while money was freely available and the economy grew.
But Erdogan's expansive economic program also made Turkey more
vulnerable.
Turkey
has a chronic current account deficit. It imports more goods and
services than it exports and has to borrow foreign money to pay for
the difference. In the early Erdogan years a lot of money flowed into
Turkey. But it was invested in unproductive matters. New housing
expanded a booming Istanbul. New splendid bridges and airports, lots
of shopping malls and more than 10,000 new
mosques were
build as well as a 1,000 room palace for Erdogan to use. His cronies
in the building industry got very rich.
But
productive industries that create products to export to other markets
are harder to build than mosques. Erdogan never made them a
priority. Thus Turkey's current
account deficitsgrew
from 1% of its GDP to about 6% of GDP. This was clearly
unsustainable.
During
the boom the Turkish central bank interests rates came down from
earlier heights but were still kept higher than elsewhere. The
industries and banks borrowed in Euros or dollars which carried less
interests but this also meant that they took on a high currency risk.
If the Turkish lira was to fall the loans would have to be paid back
in hard currencies from revenue made in a diminishing lira.
Under
normal circumstances Turkey's central bank would have engineered one
or more mild recession during the 16 year long boom. Some of the
accumulated waste and bad loans would have been discarded.
Consumption of foreign goods and the current account deficit would
have come down. But Erdogan has a curious understanding of economic
theory. He believes that high interest rates cause inflation.
Every
time the Turkish Central Bank increased its interest rate to keep
inflation in check and to stop the lira from falling Erdogan found
harsh words against it and threatened its independence. The
relatively cheap money kept flowing, the Erdogan boom kept going, but
the structural problems became worse.
Since
early 2017 inflation in Turkey picked up. It since increased from 8%
to now 15%. The currency went down. The value of 1 lira fell from US
$0.30 in 2016 to US $0.20 a week ago. During the last few days it
crashed another 25% to US $0.15. It now takes 2,000 lira to pay back
the principal of a 1,000 lira loan taken out in U.S. dollars in 2016.
The Turkish industries and banks have borrowed some $150 billion in
foreign currencies. Only those who export most of their products in
hard currencies will be able to pay back their loans. The others are
practically bankrupt.
The
bill for the long boom is coming through. The Turkish lira is
crashing. No foreigners want to loan Turkey more money. For taking
such a high risk they demand extremely hight interest. Turkey will
soon be unable to pay for its imports, especially for the hydrocarbon
energy it needs. Unfriendly relations with the United States will
make it difficult to take out an IMF emergency loan. It would come
with very harsh conditions such as demands to 'reform', i.e. end, the
benefits Erdogan has channeled to his followers.
The current escalation:
The
escalation of the currency crisis during the last week coincided with
the escalation of a minor conflict with the United States.
After
the 2016 coup attempt Turkey imprisoned U.S. pastor Andrew Brunson,
who had long worked in the country, and charged him with terrorism.
Last week a deal was arranged to exchange Brunson for a Turkish
person held in Israel on terrorism charges. Turkey had expected more
from the deal. It wants to free several people who the U.S.
imprisoned for having breached U.S. sanctions on Iran. (They indeed
did so by arranging a gold for oil trade with Iran. A trade from
which Turkey, and especially Erdogan's immediate family, profited.)
The deal was a carom shot, personally sealed by Trump, to trade a Turkish citizen imprisoned on terrorism charges in Israel for Brunson’s release. But it apparently fell apart on Wednesday, when a Turkish court, rather than sending the pastor home, ordered that he be transferred to house arrest while his trial continues.
Trump
and his evangelical vice president Pence went berserk:
Thursday morning, after a rancorous phone call with Erdogan, Trump struck back. The United States “will impose large sanctions” on Turkey, he tweeted. “This innocent man of faith should be released immediately.”
Vice President Pence chimed in, saying in a speech at a religious conference that Turkey must free Brunson now “or be prepared to face the consequences.” Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called his counterpart in Ankara.
Erdogan
would not give in. But the markets reacted to the public sanctions
threat. The lira began to crash from 4.80 lira per dollar to 5.20 per
dollar. On Wednesday a Turkish delegation traveled to
Washington to further negotiate the issue but the talks failed. The
lira went to 5.50 per dollar. The financial markets became alarmed.
The fall out of the conflict threatened to impact European banks.
“There are various campaigns being carried out. Don’t heed them,” Erdogan said.
“Don’t forget, if they have their dollars, we have our people, our God. We are working hard. Look at what we were 16 years ago and look at us now,” he said.
Erdogan
said he would not "surrender to economic hitmen". The banks
which have loaned a lot of money to Turkey might understand that as a
threat to default on Turkey's loans.
At
noon the lira was falling minute by minute at a 20% per day rate.
Erdogan's son in law Berat Albayrak, who was recently made finance
minister, held
a planned speech on
the economy. He was expected to give some numbers on the deficits and
to name some concrete steps the government would take to end the lira
problem. But he refrained from doing that. He tried to calm the
markets by claiming the the Turkish central bank is independent and
would act as necessary. No one believes that the central bank
in Turkey can act without Erdogan's approval. Erdogan is a
self-declared enemy of high interests and the central bank did not
intervene today when it was urgently needed.
In
the mid of Albayrack's speech Donald Trump personally intervened via
Twitter:
Donald J. Trump @realDonaldTrump - 12:47 utc - 10 Aug 2018
I have just authorized a doubling of Tariffs on Steel and Aluminum with respect to Turkey as their currency, the Turkish Lira, slides rapidly downward against our very strong Dollar! Aluminum will now be 20% and Steel 50%. Our relations with Turkey are not good at this time!
Steel
is one of Turkey's biggest exports. The U.S. imports $1 billion worth
of Turkish steel per year. The White House later said the these
tariffs are tied to security, not to trade.
Meanwhile
Erdogan held a
phone call with the Russia's President Putin to "discuss the
economic ties". He may have asked for an emergency loan.
Meanwhile
the lira dropped to 6.80 for a dollar.
Erdogan
then gave another speech in which he lambasted the U.S. pressure
without naming Trump or mentioning his tweet.
At
the end of the day the lira stood at 6.50 to the dollar after 5.50
yesterday. Turkish stocks were down some 2%. Stocks of some Turkish
banks and steel producers fell 15%. Spanish, Italian and French
banks, which lent tens of billion Euros to Turkish banks, also
lost. Bloomberg documented
today's tic-toc in a live
blog.
Where from here:
Erdogan
now has the weekend to discuss the issue with his advisors. If no
measures are taken by Monday morning today's crash will gain pace.
The lira will fall further. The central bank will have to raise
interest raise to 30+% to stop the slide and to attract urgently
needed foreign money. The Turkish economy will go into a deep
recessions. A number of its banks and companies will go bankrupt.
Unemployment will rise.
Erdogan
will blame the U.S. and the "interest rate lobby" for the
downfall. His followers will believe him. Any hope that Erdogan will
go over this is in vain.
But
Turkey's problems are structural. The burst of its bubble was long
expected. Its foreign account deficit is simply unsustainable. It
will have to cut back on imports and boost its exports. It will need
large emergency loans.
Yes,
the U.S. is using the issue to put pressure on Turkey. But the U.S.
is not the root cause of the problem. It only exposes it.
The
U.S. pressure is not about Turkey's economy and not even about pastor
Brunson. The pressure is, and has been since 2013, to bring Erdogan
in line with the U.S. agenda. He will have to stop his good relations
with Russia. He will have to stop his purchase of the Russian S-400
air defense system. He may be ordered to stop the Russian pipeline.
He must follow the U.S. lead on Syria. As long as he does not do so
the U.S. will try everything to bring him down.
The
only chance Turkey has to escape from U.S. demands is to further ally
with Russia. Putin knows that Erdogan needs him. He will play for
time to increase the pressure and then make his own demands. Erdogan
will have give up completely on his plans for Syria. All Syrian land
Turkey or its proxies hold must be put back under Syrian government
control. Only then will the Turkey's trade route to the Gulf states
reopen. Only then will Russia (and Iran) help Turkey though its
crises.
On
Monday Russia's foreign minister Lavrov will visit Turkey.
Will
Erdogan accept the Russian demands or will he flip back to the U.S.
side and surrender to Trump and the IMF? Or will he find a
different way to escape from his calamity?
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.