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Turkey’s economy grew 7.6 percent in Q2 driven by domestic demand, exports

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Turkey’s economy grew 7.6 percent year-on-year in the second quarter as expected, extending a hot streak on strong domestic demand and exports, according to data on Wednesday, though economic activity was seen slowing through year end as demand cools, Reuters reported.

Gross domestic product (GDP) expanded 2.1 percent compared with the previous quarter on a seasonally and calendar-adjusted basis, Turkish Statistical Institute (TurkStat) data showed.

President Recep Tayyip ErdoÄŸan’s economic plan prioritizes growth, employment, investment and exports, driven by a series of unorthodox interest rate cuts that sparked a currency crisis and inflationary spiral late last year.

Rising prices helped drive spending while the falling lira helped drive exports.

Exports of goods and services increased by 16.4 percent in the second quarter compared with a year ago in the chain linked volume index, while such imports increased by 5.8 percent.

Household consumption added 13.6 percentage points to growth and foreign demand raised it by 2.7 points, according to bankers’ calculations.

Jason Tuvey, senior emerging markets economist at Capital Economics, said measures to support households in the face of soaring inflation helped prop up consumer spending.

“Robust growth in the first half of this year, high global energy prices and policies to shield households from the surge in inflation mean that inflation will become entrenched and the current account deficit will remain wide,” he said in a note.

The financial and insurance sector led growth, expanding 26.6 percent, followed by the services sector at 18.1 percent and professional and administrative support services at 11 percent. The industrial sector expanded 7.8 percent.

Banks’ profits soared this year as they continued to lend with rates much higher than the central bank’s one-week repo rate, which it uses to fund the market.

The banking sector’s net profit in the first seven months of the year stood at 207.9 billion lira ($11.4 billion), up 417.2 percent from the same period last year, data showed on Monday. Banks’ net interest income surged 216 percent in the same period.

The central bank unveiled new required bond holdings for lenders last week aiming to bring the rates on corporate loans closer to its policy rate, while consumer loans and mortgages are offered at very high rates.

In a Reuters poll, the economy was forecast to have expanded 7.5 percent in the second quarter with full-year growth seen at 4 percent.

Despite inflation running at 80 percent, the central bank cut its policy rate by 100 basis points in August to 13 percent. It cited indications of a slowdown in the third quarter, adding that momentum in industrial production and a positive trend in employment must be maintained.

Economists also see growth falling in the second half of the year due to a downward trend in domestic and foreign demand, led by an expected slowdown in Turkey’s largest trade partners.

Last year, Turkey’s economy bounced back strongly from the COVID-19 pandemic and grew a revised 11.4 percent, its highest rate in a decade. Annual growth in the first quarter of 2022 was revised to 7.5 percent from 7.3 percent, data showed on Wednesday.

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