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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Daniel Smith

If you think inflation is bad here, Turkey has us beat

Annual inflation in Turkey soared to nearly 80% in July, official data shows, with skyrocketing food, housing and energy prices hitting consumers hard. The Turkish Statistical Institute said consumer prices rose by 79.6% from a year earlier, up about one percentage point from June data.

Independent experts say inflation is much higher than official statistics. Economists also say the huge rise in inflation is caused by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's unorthodox belief that high borrowing costs lead to inflation despite established economic theory.

Turkey's central bank has slashed interest rates by five percentage points since September to 14%, sinking the national currency. While the bank has not made further cuts this year, central banks across the world are moving the opposite way, raising interest rates to combat global inflation.

In comparison, annual inflation hit a record 8.9% in the 19 countries that use the euro in July and a four-decade high of 9.1% in the United States in June. The Turkish lira lost 44% of its value against the US dollar last year, eroding people's ability to buy even basic items.

The dollar was trading at 17.95 against the lira on Wednesday, with the lira's value some 25% lower than at the beginning of the year.

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