To long-time observers, Turkey’s economic woes are so familiar and are almost a textbook case showing how a country can run into severe balance of payments difficulties in just a few years. The 1990s featured a similar crisis as various emerging markets had to turn to the international community (Thailand, 1998) or the United States (Mexico, 1994) to right their financial ship.
Turkey’s crisis is a replay of past emerging-market currency crises. The Turkish situation exhibits all the features that give rise to these types of crisis:
What makes this current crisis worthy of our attention is the sheer importance of the emerging markets as they increase their relative share in all aspects of the international financial markets. Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Russia and Turkey (EM7) now account for 33% of global economic output. The EM7’s growth rates are responsible for nearly half of world’s annual economic expansion. The growth in the advanced economies average 2% while the emerging markets enjoy rates of over 5% on average. On the export side, the emerging economies’ share has increased from 20% of world exports in the early 1990s over 40% today. On the import side, the share has increased from 20% to 30% over the same period.