Politics

Turkey: Accelerating growth momentum in the second quarter


The second-quarter GDP figure translates into a quarter-on-quarter growth rate of 2.1% after seasonal adjustments, showing significant acceleration over the first quarter at 0.7% which was the lowest quarterly reading since the first half of 2020. Like the first quarter, sequential performance is mainly attributable to private consumption and net exports, while capital formation and stock depletion were drags.

On the demand side, private consumption has maintained its strong pace with 22.5% YoY growth and turned out to be the major driver with a 13.6ppt contribution to the headline GDP expansion in the second quarter of 2022. The breakdown reveals a balanced outlook with strong support from both goods and services. This shows a continuation of robust household consumption driven by negative real rates, leading to fewer savings and supporting the consumption appetite.

Investment appetite on the other has remained relatively subdued in comparison to the strong performance realised last year, likely attributable to policy steps introduced to put a break on commercial TRY loan growth. Accordingly, 2Q investment growth stood at 4.7% YoY, translating into +1.2ppt contribution to the headline. In the breakdown, strength in machinery and equipment investments – which was up by 17.8% with a sequence of positive readings since the last quarter of 2019 – attracts attention, while construction investments have remained in the negative territory.

A closer look at the data shows that public consumption added 0.2ppt to the headline, inventory build-up shaved more than 10.0ppt off growth, while net exports raised the headline growth by +2.7ppt, the biggest contribution after household consumption. This is attributable to continuing strength in exports up by 3.9% YoY, despite 1.1% YoY growth in imports.

In the sectoral breakdown, all sectors with the exception of construction and agriculture lifted the headline growth signalling a continuation of a broad-based strength in economic activity. Among positive drivers, services, once again, was the biggest contributor, pulling the second-quarter performance up by 4.2ppt, followed by industry at 1.7ppt as indicated by industrial production data and the financial sector at 1.3ppt.



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