Turkey’s Gross Domestic Product expanded 2.6% in 4Q14, higher than the market consensus of 2.1%, bringing full year growth to 2.9%, compared with an upwardly revised 4.2% a year earlier. Stronger than projected stock drawdown was the key driver of the deviation from the consensus. The contribution of net exports and investments to GDP growth was negative. The data also suggested that the pace of economic activity slowed considerably in 2014, as the country has been facing quarters of sub-par growth.
Private sector investments continued to be the weakest part of the country’s GDP, as public sector investment expenditures had not been able to offset it. Investment spending decreased by 1% in 4Q14 (meaning a negative contribution of -0.3% to GDP growth). Private companies’ investment in machinery declined 3.7% in 2014, while the public sector’s purchases of equipment and spending on construction shrank 8.8%, according to the official data. On the other hand, household demand, which makes up two-thirds of GDP, grew 1.3% in 2014, compared with 5.1% in 2013. The drop was attributed to shocking rate hike in January 2014, and to the rising unemployment.
The agricultural sector posted a 2% contraction in 2014. In contrary, financial services industry posted a robust 7% growth on annual basis. The industrial breakdown of Turkey’s GDP is as follows.
There are questions to be considered mostly driven by slowing private investments, as the achievement of a sustainable growth rate appears doubtful in Turkey. Additionally, widespread loses among the leading indicators continue to point to a disappointing growth in the short-term. For instance, Purchasing Managers Index, or simply PMI, the manufacturing leading, is down to 48 in March showing a contraction. The reading has been on a declining trend since December 2014, and below 50 for the first three months of this year. The industrial production index was down to 112.26 from 130.3 in January. On the consumption side, the consumer confidence index drastically fell to 64.4 in March which was the worst print since the global financial crisis. In a nutshell, the 4Q14 GDP data did not provide encouraging signals, so did the leading indicators.
In a previous article about inflation, we noted no responsive policy implications by Turkish central bank after the worst March print since 2003. For this reason, we still expect the central bank to remain cautious, and more fiscal policy tools to be used for stimulating the economic growth.