- Turkish consumer prices accelerate less than expected
- Turkey’s central bank last raised the benchmark rate to 50%
Turkey’s inflation rate rose for a fifth straight month, edging closer to 70% despite a series of aggressive interest-rate hikes.
Consumer inflation quickened to 68.5% in March, slightly less than expected by analysts but up from 67.1% in February. The median estimate in a Bloomberg poll of economists was 69.1%.
Services, education and food were among the key contributors. Core inflation, which strips out volatile items like food and energy, quickened to the highest on record to 75.2%, up from 72.9% in February.
Monthly inflation — policymakers’ preferred gauge — slowed to 3.16% from 4.5% the previous month and recorded the lowest reading since December.
We really should stop inflating turkeys, it’s needlessly cruel.