P.A. Turkey

Guldem Atabay: Turkey continued to experience strong growth driven by domestic demand 3Q23: Slowdown to follow in 2024

As per the data provided by the Turkish Statistical Institute (TÜİK), the Turkish economy grew by 5.9% compared to the same quarter of the previous year and by 0.3% compared to the second quarter. Economists had anticipated a growth of 5.5% due to the sustained high consumption driven by domestic demand. The quarterly growth expectation was 1.0%.

The annual growth rate for the first nine months hence is 4.6%.

Household consumption continued to be the primary contributor to growth, accounting for 7.7 points. Investments followed with a contribution of 3.4 points, while the contribution of public expenditures to growth was noteworthy at 0.7 points.

In the third quarter, the factors pulling down the growth were net exports with -2.6 points and inventories with -3.2 points.

In the third quarter, construction grew by 8.1%, industry by 5.7%, financial and insurance activities by 5.1%, services by 4.3%, public administration, education, human health, and social services activities by 3.6%, real estate activities by 2.7%, other service activities by 2.2%, information and communication activities by 1.7%, and the agriculture sector by 0.3%. However, professional, administrative, and support service activities decreased by 2.5%. Product taxes (less subsidies) increased by 16.5%.

Household consumption increased by 11.2%, public expenditures by 5.3%, and gross fixed capital formation increased by 14.7%. The contribution of net exports to growth was negative.

The share of labor’s Gross Value Added (GVA) in total was reduced to 32.2%.

The share of labor payments in current prices within Gross Value Added was 26.1% in the third quarter of the previous year, and this ratio increased to 32.2% in 3Q23. It decreased compared to the previous quarter’s level of 34.3%. The share of capital was 55.0% in the third quarter of the previous year, and in the third quarter of 2023, it decreased to 47.0%. It also increased from 43.8% in the previous quarter to 47.0%.

Quarter-to-quarter growth reflects the change in economic performance from one quarter to the next and provides insights into the short-term fluctuations and trends within an economy.

In this context, the description highlights the volatility in quarter-to-quarter growth in the mentioned period: