Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Turkey’s current account deficit widens to $9.9bn in January

Reuters/Chris Helgren
Almost 60 percent of Invesco survey respondents said it had made gold more attractive

Turkey’s current account deficit widened to $9.85 billion in January, data from the central bank showed, the highest level in four decades of available data, driven by a soaring energy bill and gold imports.

It was the highest monthly deficit since 1984, the first year for which such data is available, according to central bank records. Before that time Turkey did not have an economy large enough to generate such a deficit, data shows.

Flipping Turkey’s chronic current account deficit, at $48.7 billion in 2022, into a surplus has been one of the main goals under President Tayyip Erdogan’s economic programme that also prioritises growth, exports and employment with low rates.

In a Reuters poll, the median estimate for the current account deficit in January was $10 billion, with forecasts ranging from $6 billion to $11.1 billion.

Turkey’s trade deficit, a major component of the current account, widened 38 percent in January to $14.24 billion, data showed, mainly due to the sharp rise in gold imports and the surging cost of energy imports.

The current account balance showed a deficit of $6.89 billion in the same period last year.

Excluding gold and energy, the current account showed a surplus of $2.6 billion in January, compared with a surplus of $1.7 billion in the same month last year.

Economists expect the current account balance to record further deficits in the coming months and expect the deficit to stand at $43.5 billion at the end of the year, the poll showed.

Economists are also monitoring the impact of the massive earthquakes that hit the country’s southeast in February as well as the course of energy and gold imports after authorities introduced measures to limit gold imports last month.