Readers who are familiar with the Turkish economy are well aware of the
ambitious goals set by the governing Justice and Development Party (AK Party)
for 2023, the year we will celebrate the centenary of the Turkish Republic.
Let me remind other readers that the AK Party, while nothing was obliging
them economically or politically, decided two years ago to announce that our
gross domestic product (GDP) will reach $2,000 billion and the per capita
income $25,000 in 2023, assuming that the population projection is a little
more than 80 million. When these figures were announced, I made calculations
to check whether they are realistic. My simple check showed that the
achievement of these two goals was based on such unrealistic assumptions that
miracles would be needed.
|
Since that time, I have been asking myself what political motive could
have pushed the AK Party to involve itself in a bet that is lost in advance.
I have no definite answer. I think that the AK Party considered that GDP
level sufficient to prove Turkey's status as a world power. Indeed, a GDP of
$2,000 billion in 2023 would probably make Turkey the thirteenth to
fourteenth largest economy in the world (the tenth spot, their highest
ambition, being absolutely out of the question) and a $25,000 per capita
average would bring Turkey's per capita income up to the EU average. So far
so good, however some moderately ambitious but more realistic targets could
also have been useful for the power-obsessed AK Party. It might also be that
the AK Party's economists simply made a mistake in their assumption of the
impossible.
Indeed, the assumptions lying behind a GDP of $2,000 billion in 2023 are
almost impossible. In 2002, Turkey's GDP was $233 billion, TL 351 billion
nominally and TL 73 billionin real terms (in terms of 1998 prices). By 2007,
on the eve of the global recession, these figures were, respectively, $647
billion, TL 843 billion and TL 101 billion in real terms. During the first
five years of AK Party rule, the growth performance was much better than the
past years, although it was still restricted to 38 percent. The remaining
part of the 280 percent increase in dollar terms was caused by inflation and
from the real appreciation of the Turkish lira. It is true that in 2002 the
Turkish lira was probably slightly undervalued, and there were also strong
increases in productivity during these years, but none of these can
sufficiently explain the huge appreciation of the Turkish lira.
In 2010, the Turkish economy more than recovered from the adverse effects
of the recession thanks to high real growth rates, and appreciation of the
Turkish lira occurred after the exchange rate shock of October 2008, when it
lost 30 percent of its value. In 2010 Turkish GDP was at $731 billion, and
last year it reached $790 billion despite the low growth rate (2.2 percent)
in real terms, also thanks to the appreciation of the Turkish lira. At best I
expect a stagnation of GDP this year in terms of dollars. Real growth is
expected to be less than 4 percent, depreciation of 15 percent will probably
remain and inflation of close to 8 percent should be expected.
From now to 2023 we have 10 years. To reach a GDP of $2,000 billion, one
needs an increase of 250 percent, which means an average annual growth rate
of 10 percent in terms of dollars. If we assume that the real value of the
Turkish lira will not change in the next 10 years, which means that it would
be moderately overvalued (even despite the recent depreciation of 15
percent), and assuming an average inflation rate of 5 percent, the exchange
rate will increase from its current value of 1 USD = 2 TL to 1 USD = 3 TL
(note that I assume an inflation in dollars of 2 percent per year) so, with
these assumptions the nominal GDP should reach TL 6,000 billion in 2023.
Therefore, the nominal GDP for this year will be TL 1700 billion,
approximately. If we inflate it with even a rather low average inflation rate
of 5 percent, the real GDP must almost double within 10 years. This
corresponds to a real GDP growth of 7 percent per year. Forget it.
Then, in order to reach $2000 billion in GDP, both the Turkish lira
should continue to appreciate and the average real growth should be higher
than its current weak level. These two conditions require very strong and
persistent productivity gains. From where will they come, especially as
increases in productivity seem to be very low nowadays?
|