Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'Sacred duty': Inflation eats into Turkey's Muslim feast

EUR -
AED 3.869078
AFN 71.743683
ALL 97.765271
AMD 408.987562
ANG 1.899778
AOA 961.766165
ARS 1051.549899
AUD 1.634491
AWG 1.898778
AZN 1.790054
BAM 1.949108
BBD 2.128393
BDT 125.967517
BGN 1.950036
BHD 0.396986
BIF 3112.982664
BMD 1.053413
BND 1.413162
BOB 7.284061
BRL 6.105483
BSD 1.054081
BTN 88.564074
BWP 14.410661
BYN 3.449689
BYR 20646.901121
BZD 2.124825
CAD 1.48456
CDF 3019.08251
CHF 0.936463
CLF 0.037235
CLP 1027.44669
CNY 7.619965
CNH 7.628703
COP 4714.719871
CRC 536.463257
CUC 1.053413
CUP 27.915453
CVE 109.888763
CZK 25.275642
DJF 187.707327
DKK 7.458809
DOP 63.511945
DZD 140.463773
EGP 51.998879
ERN 15.8012
ETB 127.654237
FJD 2.400745
FKP 0.831477
GBP 0.834188
GEL 2.87057
GGP 0.831477
GHS 16.839345
GIP 0.831477
GMD 74.792269
GNF 9083.812602
GTQ 8.141049
GYD 220.435274
HKD 8.201102
HNL 26.620604
HRK 7.51427
HTG 138.574234
HUF 408.422068
IDR 16780.24218
ILS 3.951158
IMP 0.831477
INR 88.967865
IQD 1380.859105
IRR 44353.967719
ISK 145.518545
JEP 0.831477
JMD 167.405249
JOD 0.746978
JPY 163.732292
KES 136.415161
KGS 91.117401
KHR 4258.420018
KMF 491.416246
KPW 948.071591
KRW 1474.257232
KWD 0.324033
KYD 0.878492
KZT 523.846454
LAK 23162.695542
LBP 94396.106526
LKR 307.952708
LRD 193.955934
LSL 19.177259
LTL 3.110456
LVL 0.637199
LYD 5.148324
MAD 10.509019
MDL 19.153422
MGA 4903.212377
MKD 61.399199
MMK 3421.44538
MNT 3579.498413
MOP 8.45256
MRU 42.079529
MUR 49.731668
MVR 16.285489
MWK 1827.841833
MXN 21.533085
MYR 4.709282
MZN 67.260337
NAD 19.177259
NGN 1753.469495
NIO 38.786833
NOK 11.701568
NPR 141.702838
NZD 1.800506
OMR 0.405574
PAB 1.054091
PEN 4.001661
PGK 4.238488
PHP 61.932804
PKR 292.672469
PLN 4.323256
PYG 8224.761975
QAR 3.842707
RON 4.977167
RSD 117.005807
RUB 105.183805
RWF 1447.743215
SAR 3.95646
SBD 8.831169
SCR 14.319876
SDG 633.635716
SEK 11.595463
SGD 1.415972
SHP 0.831477
SLE 23.912699
SLL 22089.555656
SOS 602.437374
SRD 37.201817
STD 21803.528943
SVC 9.223334
SYP 2646.732426
SZL 19.170364
THB 36.778346
TJS 11.236927
TMT 3.686947
TND 3.325682
TOP 2.467203
TRY 36.265127
TTD 7.157494
TWD 34.285387
TZS 2802.079135
UAH 43.540825
UGX 3868.717556
USD 1.053413
UYU 45.235124
UZS 13492.67568
VES 47.877537
VND 26746.164259
VUV 125.063346
WST 2.940699
XAF 653.706428
XAG 0.034342
XAU 0.000409
XCD 2.846902
XDR 0.794081
XOF 653.712613
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.195093
ZAR 19.188587
ZMK 9482.016784
ZMW 28.940912
ZWL 339.19866
  • RBGPF

    1.6500

    61.84

    +2.67%

  • CMSC

    -0.0300

    24.52

    -0.12%

  • BCC

    -0.1750

    140.175

    -0.12%

  • RELX

    -1.5200

    44.43

    -3.42%

  • JRI

    -0.0465

    13.03

    -0.36%

  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    6.8

    +0.15%

  • BCE

    0.0350

    26.875

    +0.13%

  • GSK

    -0.7124

    33.2885

    -2.14%

  • RIO

    0.5450

    60.975

    +0.89%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    13.31

    +0.3%

  • NGG

    0.1500

    62.52

    +0.24%

  • VOD

    0.0650

    8.745

    +0.74%

  • BP

    -0.1000

    28.95

    -0.35%

  • CMSD

    0.0022

    24.36

    +0.01%

  • AZN

    -1.5800

    63.46

    -2.49%

  • BTI

    0.8100

    36.3

    +2.23%

'Sacred duty': Inflation eats into Turkey's Muslim feast
'Sacred duty': Inflation eats into Turkey's Muslim feast / Photo: Yasin AKGUL - AFP

'Sacred duty': Inflation eats into Turkey's Muslim feast

With inflation in Turkey galloping, the sheep Gul Er buys every year for the Muslim festival of sacrifice in Istanbul looks agonisingly out of reach.

Text size:

Prices have doubled or even tripled since President Recep Tayyip Erdogan began an unorthodox economic experiment last year that has seen Turks' living standards suffer.

The young mother hopes to bargain down the price on one of the skimpiest-looking animals at a livestock fair held under white tents in a conservative corner of the city before the Kurban Bayrami (Eid al-Adha in Arabic) holiday.

"It is a sacred duty," she said of buying a sheep, which along with oxen and goats are sacrificed in the name of Allah, with the meat traditionally shared with the poor, friends and neighbours.

"But this year, prices are unaffordable," Er said, the stench of thousands of animals mixing with the sounds of haggling in the heavy summer air, ahead of Saturday's first full day of festivities.

Annual inflation in Turkey has officially reached 78.6 percent, although economists and many ordinary Turks doubt government data.

Even if the official figures are to be believed, that is higher than in any other emerging market and nearly 10 times the record levels rocking the European Union, where the cost of living is unleashing political crises.

An independent survey prepared by the ENAG group -- and believed by most Turks -- puts the annual inflation rate at 175 percent.

Besides clouding Erdogan's chances in next year's election, these figures spell trouble for the merchants at the Istanbul animal fair.

- Snowballing problems -

Turkey's agricultural chambers union chief Semsi Bayraktar expects sales to fall by a quarter this year.

Galip Toklu, a breeder who came to the 40,000-square-metre (10-acre) fair from the Black Sea city of Samsun, listed the ways inflation snowballs into seemingly endless problems.

The cost of animal feed has quadrupled while the amount he pays to drive his livestock to Istanbul has tripled since the last Kurban Bayrami, forcing Toklu to double the price of his meat.

"Last year, I sold 500 kilos (1,100 pounds) of beef for 20,000 liras. This year, I set my prices at 45,000 liras," he said.

Yet few can now afford Toklu's beef, while selling it any cheaper could put him out of business.

"Customers are unavoidably upset," he said, his face sullen under a wide-brimmed hat.

- 'Erdonomics' -

While this year's animal fair looks huge, its 160 tents are a fraction of the 500 erected in past years.

As the fair winds down, breeder Sinas Ates looks despondent, having failed to make a single sale in two days. Livestock farming in Turkey is "finished", he grumbled.

Just like the sacrifice of sheep, Erdogan's economic experiment -- dubbed "Erdonomics" by sceptical global markets -- is also linked to his faith.

Erdogan cites Islamic proscriptions on usury to justify his refusal to raise interest rates to fight inflation.

High interest rates cause prices to rise, according to Erdogan's logic, which contradicts accepted economic orthodoxy.

So Erdogan has pushed the central bank to set interest rates even lower. Analysts at Capital Economics in London see the possibility of a crash of the lira as "a major risk".

- 'Allah's orders' -

At the market, Salih Yeter has responded to the crisis by coming out to look for the perfect sheep with seven friends, who will all contribute to the purchase.

"People usually can't afford to eat meat," the 57-year-old said, adding that giving away meat to the poor is particularly important in times of trouble.

The price of food has soared by 93 percent in the past year, according to official data, with meat prices pushing even higher.

This is especially painful for Er, whose daughter has a metabolic condition that restricts her to a meat diet.

"I can't even respect my daughter's diet," the mother whispered.

But respect for the holy holiday's traditions is binding, said Selahattin Kose, a "hajji" (one who has made the pilgrimage to Mecca), from the eastern city of Erzurum.

"Prices have doubled, but we have to deal with it," Kose said. "It's Allah's orders."

(U.Gruber--BBZ)