TheEconomistOctober30th 2021 43
Europe
Turkey
Autumn of the patriarch
A
good dust-upwith one Western ally
or another is something that Turkey’s
president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, always
relishes. On October 23rd he took on ten of
them at the same time, announcing that he
had ordered the American, French, Ger
man, Dutch, Canadian, Swedish, Norwe
gian, Danish, Finnish, and New Zealand
ambassadors to be declared personae non
gratae, a prelude to having them kicked out
of the country. Their offence was to have
signed a letter urging Turkey to release Os
man Kavala, a philanthropist locked up on
farcical terror and coup charges. It took an
other couple of days, the exhortations of
Turkish officials, who warned him of the
dire potential consequences to the coun
try’s economy, and a carefully crafted state
ment by the American embassy, in which
the mission said it did not meddle in Tur
key’s domestic affairs, before Mr Erdogan
backed down. The envoys were allowed to
remain in Ankara.
After nearly provoking, then averting,
the biggest diplomatic crisis Turkey has
seen in decades, Mr Erdogan proclaimed
victory. The envoys “took a step back from
theslanderagainstourcountry”,hesaid.
“Theywillbemorecarefulnow.”
Theepisode,andthegloatingthatfol
lowed, showed how badly Mr Erdogan
needs something to celebrate. Turkey’s
leaderishavingoneoftheworstslumpsof
hislongcareer.Anallianceofthetwomain
oppositionparties,thesecularRepublican
People’sParty(chp) andthenationalistIyi
(“Good”)partyispollingaheadofMrErdo
gan’sgoverningcoalition,composedofhis
ownJusticeandDevelopment(ak) party
andtheNationalistMovementParty.Were
parliamentaryelectionstotakeplaceto
morrow(theyarenotdueuntil2023,to
getherwiththenextpresidentialelection),
therulingcoalitionwouldloseitsmajori
ty.MrErdogan,meanwhile,trailsbehind
eachofthefourmostlikelycontendersfor
thepresidency,insomecasesbydouble
digitsinputativerunoffs.Thewhispers
arestartingtogrowlouder:couldtheErdo
ganerabedrawingtoa close?
Theeconomy,hobbledbyhighprices
andaplummetingcurrency,isthemain
reason.Thelirahaslostover20%ofitsdol
larvaluesincethestartoftheyear,more
thananyothermajorcurrency.Thelatest
routcameonOctober21st,whenthecen
tralbankslashedthemaininterestrateby
twofullpercentagepoints.Daysearlier,Mr
Erdoganhadsackedthreemembersofthe
bank’s monetarypolicy committee. The
surprise cut, the second in as many
months,broughttherateto nearlyfour
pointsbelowtherateofinflation,which
reached19.6%inSeptember.Manygovern
ments have used negative real interest
ratestorevivegrowth,usuallyafterunder
shootingtheirinflationtargets.Turkeyis
overshootingitsowntarget(5%)fourfold.
Investorshaverunoutofpatience.
FromMrErdogan’svastpalaceinAnka
ra,thingsdonotlooksobad.Theeconomy
grewbya record21.7%inannualtermsin
thethreemonthstoJuly,thankstolarge
I STANBUL
As the lira tanks, so does President Erdogan’spoliticalstock
→Alsointhissection
44 FencingtheEU’sborders
46 Serbia’smilitarybuild-up
46 WhyFrancelovesacronyms
48 Russia’sfeistyCommunists
50 Charlemagne:NuclearEurope
Erdogan’s gift to Turkey
Turkish lira per $, inverted scale
Source: Refinitiv Datastream
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