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Mario B

Why Turkey is Thriving

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Mario B   

Jeffrey Sachs

 

27, May 2013

 

 

NEW YORK – A recent visit to Turkey reminded me of its enormous economic successes during the last decade. The economy has grown rapidly, inequality is declining, and innovation is on the rise.

 

 

Turkey’s achievements are all the more remarkable when one considers its neighborhood. Its neighbors to the west, Cyprus and Greece, are at the epicenter of the Euro-zone crisis. To the southeast is war-torn Syria, which has already disgorged almost 400,000 refugees into Turkey. To the east lie Iraq and Iran. And to the northeast lie Armenia and Georgia. If there is more complicated neighborhood in the world, it would be difficult to find it.

 

Turkey has made remarkable strides in the midst of regional upheavals. After a sharp downturn in 1999-2001, the economy grew by 5% per year on average from 2002 to 2012. It has remained at peace, despite regional wars. Its banks avoided the boom-bust cycle of the past decade, having learned from the banking collapse in 2000-2001. Inequality has been falling. And the government has won three consecutive general elections, each time with a greater share of the popular vote.

 

There is nothing flashy about Turkey’s rise, which has been based on fundamentals, rather than bubbles or resource discoveries. Indeed, Turkey lacks its neighbors’ oil and gas resources, but it compensates for this with the competitiveness of its industry and services. Tourism alone attracted more than 36 million visitors in 2012, making Turkey one of the world’s top destinations.

 

Even a short stay in Ankara allows one to see these underlying strengths. The airport, highways, and other infrastructure are first class, and a high-speed intercity rail network links Ankara with other parts of the country. Much of the advanced engineering is homegrown. Turkish construction firms are internationally competitive and increasingly win bids throughout the Middle East and Africa.

 

Turkey’s universities are rising as well. Ankara has become a hub of higher education, attracting students from Africa and Asia. Many top programs are in English, ensuring that Turkey will attract an increasing number of international students. And the country’s universities are increasingly spinning off high-tech companies in avionics, information technology, and advanced electronics, among other areas.

 

To its credit, Turkey has begun to invest heavily in sustainable technologies. The country is rich in wind, geothermal, and other renewable energy, and will most likely become a global exporter of advanced green innovations.

 

Waste-treatment facilities are not typically tourist attractions, but Ankara’s novel integrated urban waste-management system has rightly attracted global attention. Until a few years ago, the waste was dumped into a fetid, stinking, noxious landfill. Now, with cutting-edge technology, the landfill has been turned into a green zone.

 

The private waste-management company ITC receives thousands of tons of solid municipal waste each day. The waste is separated into recyclable materials (plastics, metals) and organic waste. The organic waste is processed in a fermentation plant, producing compost and methane, which is used to produce electricity in a 25-megawatt power plant. The electricity is returned to the city’s power grid, while the heat exhaust is piped to the facility’s greenhouses, which produce tomatoes, strawberries, and orchids.

 

Turkey’s diversified, innovative base of industry, construction, and services serves it well in a world in which market opportunities are shifting from the United States and Western Europe to Africa, Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. Turkey has been deft in seizing these new opportunities, with exports increasingly headed south and east to the emerging economies, rather than west to high-income markets. This trend will continue, as Africa and Asia become robust markets for Turkey’s construction firms, information technology, and green innovations.

 

So, how did Turkey do it? Most important, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and his economics team, led by Deputy Prime Minister Ali Babacan, have stuck to basics and looked to the long term. Erdoğan came to power in 2003, after years of short-term instability and banking crises. The International Monetary Fund had been called in for an emergency rescue. Step by step, the Erdoğan-Babacan strategy was to rebuild the banking sector, get the budget under control, and invest heavily and consistently where it counts: infrastructure, education, health, and technology.

 

Smart diplomacy has also helped. Turkey has remained a staunchly moderate voice in a region of extremes. It has kept an open door and balanced diplomacy (to the extent possible) with the major powers in its neighborhood. This has helped Turkey not only to maintain its own internal balance, but also to win markets and keep friends without the heavy baggage and risks of divisive geopolitics.

 

No doubt, Turkey’s ability to continue on a rapid growth trajectory remains uncertain. Any combination of crises – the Euro-zone, Syria, Iraq, Iran, or world oil prices – could create instability. Another global financial crisis could disrupt short-term capital inflows. A dangerous neighborhood means inescapable risks, though Turkey has demonstrated a remarkable capacity during the last decade to surmount them.

 

Moreover, the challenge of raising educational quality and attainment, especially of girls and women, remains a priority. Fortunately, the government has clearly acknowledged the education challenge and is pursuing it through school reforms, increased investments, and the introduction of new information technologies in the classroom.

 

Turkey’s successes have deep roots in governmental capacity and its people’s skills, reflecting decades of investment and centuries of history dating back to Ottoman times. Other countries cannot simply copy these achievements; but they can still learn the main lesson that is too often forgotten in a world of “stimulus,” bubbles, and short-term thinking. Long-term growth stems from prudent monetary and fiscal policies, the political will to regulate banks, and a combination of bold public and private investments in infrastructure, skills, and cutting-edge technologies.

 

 

http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/inside-the-turkish-economic-miracle-by-jeffrey-d--sachs

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Mario B   

The private waste-management company ITC receives thousands of tons of solid municipal waste each day. The waste is separated into recyclable materials (plastics, metals) and organic waste. The organic waste is processed in a fermentation plant, producing compost and methane, which is used to produce electricity in a 25-megawatt power plant. The electricity is returned to the city’s power grid, while the heat exhaust is piped to the facility’s greenhouses, which produce tomatoes, strawberries, and orchids.

If we could transfer this technology to our major cities/towns i.e; Mogadishu, Hargeisa, Bosaso, Galkayo, Beledweyne... then it will be grand.

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Chimera   

Great article, only a decade ago Turkey's economy was failing, and looked down upon by the EU with regards to its inclusion bid, but now its the other way around. Greeks are migrating to Turkey for jobs, German companies are setting up their plants in Turkey because of cheaper tax, and more affordable wages.

 

Turkey is spreading her wings indeed.

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The civil service is what really counts indeed, then the skills, infrastructure and a young Turkish population with little debt, hence the consumer boom.

 

Turkey boom and Qatar as fast growing powerhouse too (along S. Arabia, UAE ect who invest heavily in skills and prudent finances) are great news for East Africa, now probably the next frontier with some stability (Djibouti, Uganda, Sudan,Tanzania or Ethiopia have never done so well, so is expected Somalia).

Rwanda, now a top investment favorite, has shown that even remoteness or little resources are no real obstacles with proper leadership.

 

 

 

PS: most BRICs or emerging countries are heavily hyped due to intractable structural barriers or expected to reach a plateau (it's said growth slow down markedly once $4000/per capta GDP is reached).

Even S. Africans companies invest more abroad than at home, now increasingly in E.Africa: Tanzania etc.

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This kind of reports are right up your alley chimera, ma istiri, as in common with some certain sections of Somalis, Turks can do no wrong in your eyes at the moment. Turkey is certainly booming at the moment no denying that, but its no South Korea with indigenous high tech know how, apart from heavy property construction, agriculture, food processing textiles, light industry, tourism, its economy is decidedly low tech and relies heavily on foreign technical know how and expertise through FDI. it has a lot of things going for it, starting from a low base kinda like why Ethiopia is booming right now, its has large population of consumers and those reforms forced on it by the EU are bearing fruit and finally lets not forget why Turkey is continually trumpeted, its one the few bright spots in the Islamic world. So its achievement are dangled like a fruit in front of Islamic populations eager for their own destruction, to show them there is another life apart from nihilism, anarchy and race to the bottom of humanity.

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