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Turkey’s central bank keeps main interest rate at 17 percent

Turkey central bank

The logo of Turkey's central bank

Turkey’s central bank on Thursday kept its main interest rate steady at 17 percent after two consecutive hikes aimed at slowing down inflation and supporting the slumping lira currency, AFP reported.

But the bank also promised “to maintain decisively the tight monetary policy stance for an extended period” of time.

The decision was in line with the expectations as economists appear so far satisfied by the moves taken by the new central bank governor, Naci Ağbal.

Facing rising inflation and a falling lira, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan replaced the  governor and finance minister last year with market-friendly officials.

Erdoğan had put pressure on the bank’s managers to keep interest rates down, subscribing to the unorthodox belief that higher rates cause inflation instead of tamping it down.

But Thursday’s decision is likely to raise questions about future monetary policy and the influence Erdoğan appears to still wield over the nominally independent bank.

“A mistake in my mind by Agbal, the first he has made to date,” BlueBay Asset Management economist Timothy Ash said.

“This was an opportunity to get ahead of the curve and remember inflation increased in December and is expected to increase in the first quarter.”

Consumer prices rose faster than expected last month at 14.6 percent year-on-year.

Capital Economics senior emerging markets economist Jason Tuvey said inflation concerns “appear to have been put to one side amid signs that Turkey’s second virus wave and tighter monetary conditions caused the economic recovery to falter at the end of 2020.”

Ağbal raised the rate by a combined 675 basis points in his first two central bank meetings, which saw the Turkish lira rally as markets breathed a sigh of relief.

But Erdoğan reaffirmed his distaste for high rates in a speech to a group of Turkish businessmen on Friday, causing the lira to pare back some of its recent gains.

“We’ll achieve nothing with high interest rates,” Erdoğan said. “Whether they listen or not, I’m against them. I will continue my fight against them until the end.”

Economists such as Ash said another rate hike on Thursday would have signalled Ağbal’s independence to foreign investors, who have been leaving the Turkish market in the past year.

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