The rise in consumer prices reached 36.08% year on year in December in Turkey, a record since September 2002 due to the collapse of the Turkish lira, according to official figures released on Monday.
This inflation, more than seven times higher than the government’s initial target, can be explained by the fall of the Turkish lira, which has lost nearly 45% once morest the dollar over one year.
Inflation, which hit 21.31% year-on-year in November, has become a politically explosive subject in Turkey eighteen months before the next presidential election slated for June 2023.
The opposition has accused in recent months the National Statistics Office (Tüik) of knowingly – and largely – underestimating the rise in prices.
For the Turks, the collapse of the currency translates into a surge in prices that is difficult to sustain, the country being very dependent on imports, especially for raw materials and energy.
After several weeks of historic losses, the Turkish lira rallied sharply in mid-December following emergency measures announced by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and massive sales of dollar reserves, but the currency is seeing once more its value melted for a week once morest the greenback.
afp