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Turkey’s annual inflation rose as expected in December, ending 2023 at 65.7%. It’s likely to remain elevated in the near term due to wage adjustments – particularly to the minimum wage – as well as slower normalisation in domestic demand and hikes in administrative pricesTurkey’s monthly inflation came in slightly below of consensus at 2.93% month-on-month, with annual inflation for 2023 at 64.8% year-on-year versus the forecast of 65% from the Central Bank of Turkey (CBT) in its latest inflation report. An increase from 62% a month ago came about on the back of higher food and energy prices. While there was an increase of 1.2% in December 2022, the average of December months in the 2003-based index for the last ten years has been 1.9%, indicating that the base effect was unfavourable for this year.Inflation outlook (%)Image Source: TurkstatOn the other hand, October PPI stood at 1.1% MoM, translating into 44.2% YoY. The decline in annual PPI from close to triple digits at the end of last year shows an improvement in cost pressures despite a YoY increase in the TL equivalent of import prices lately due to commodity price developments and exchange rate increases.Core inflation (CPI-C) came in at 2.31% MoM, inching up to 70.6% on an annual basis on the back of pricing behaviour, exchange rate developments, adjustments in administered prices and inertia in services. On a seasonally adjusted basis, headline inflation remained broadly unchanged in the last month of 2023 despite an increase in goods inflation. Services recorded the lowest monthly reading last year, offsetting the impact of the goods.Monthly trend CPI (sa, MoM)Image Source: INGIn the breakdown:
As a result, goods inflation moved up to 55.5% YoY, while core goods inflation receded to 52.8% YoY. Annual inflation in services was significantly influenced by domestic demand, and wage hikes maintained an uptrend. It reached another peak at 90.7% YoY, attributable to the continuing rise in rent, catering and telecommunication services.Annual inflation in expenditure groupsImage Source: TurkstatOverall, annual inflation rose as expected in December. We expect further increases in the near term, given the higher-than-expected minimum wage hike and increases in administrative prices due to SCT and revaluation rate-related adjustments. Accordingly, we see inflation remaining elevated until mid-2024, with further increases above 70% on seasonal effects in January and unfavourable base effects in May. On the other hand, the second half of the year ahead will likely see a sharp downtrend – reflecting this year’s high base and the further impact of tighter policy, pulling inflation to below 45% at year-end.In its monetary policy strategy for 2024, the CBT summarised its planned policy actions:
At its December MPC meeting, the CBT raised the one-week repo rate to 42.5%, providing guidance that the tightening cycle would be completed as soon as possible. The central bank also reiterated that the monetary tightening required for sustained price stability would be maintained as long as necessary. Accordingly, following one more hike in January, we expect the CBT to remain mute until the third quarter of next year.More By This Author:Grim Outlook For The European Staffing Sector In 2024 Key Events In Developed Markets And EMEA This Week FX Daily: A Dollar Rally To Start The New Year