Volume 2, No. 8, August 2001

 

Turkey : Latest Victim of IMF

—Arvind

 

Mexico, South East Asia, Russia, Brazil.... now Turkey. Tomorrow it will be Argentina. All victims of IMF battering. The symptoms were common, the disease the same, the cure the same IMF structural adjustments. The only difference with Turkey is, a super-cop cum super-minister has been appointed to forcefully administer the bitter medicine. This gangster will have extra-constitutional powers answerable to nobody save his bosses in Washington. He has been given sweeping powers over all economic and financial matters of the country. He is to take charge of the treasury, planning, and privatisation. He will oversee budget spending, the central bank and the regulation of the banking industry and capital markets. He can overrule all ministers.

Who then is this monster who has thrown aside even a pretense at democracy and ‘elected’ government. He is Turkish by origin but has his home in Washington. His name is Kemal Dervis. Prior to taking over as Turkey’s super-minister, he was vice-president of the World Bank. The IMF had been aggressively demanding his appointment ever since the current crisis exploded on February 19. Even the puppet government in Turkey found this an imposition and at first resisted. He was instead meekly offered the post of Governor of the Turkish Central Bank as a compromise. This was arrogantly refused by Dervis and the IMF, who demanded all powers or nothing. Finally, the servile Prime Minister acquised.

The crisis in Turkey is a mirror-image of what happened in East Asia and elsewhere. First the FII pumped in huge funds and pushed up the stock exchange to dizzying heights. The stock market boomed from 5000 in mid 1999 to 20,000 in early 2000. But this was artificial and speculative; the real economy was in shambles. Throughout the 1990s inflation had been at 100%, and even the current rate was 30%. The crisis magnified by end 2000. During just two weeks in December interest rates shot up 1,700%. A number of banks crashed and hundreds more were on the brink of collapse. Amidst another episode of capital flight the IMF came with its standard bail-out of $10 billion as a three-year loan.

And with it came the ‘reforms’ package. They demanded immediate boosting of foreign currency reserves through privatisation. The government faithfully pushed through measures to sell off one-third of its stake in Turkish Telekom and 50% in Turkish Airlines.

Yet the crisis only deepened. Together with the economic crisis a political crisis erupted in mid February resulting from an open spat between the Prime Minister and President over the issue of an anti-corruption drive in the banking sector.

The FIIs saw their chance and launched their concerted attack. Overnight they pulled out their cash (on which the entire Turkish economy was dependent having been an IMF faithful for decades). Within hours the stock exchange fell a huge 15%. There was a run on the Turkish Lira by speculators. The Central Bank pumped in $4.5 billion (1/6th of its cash reserves) into the currency market to defend the Lira. But the FIIs continued their hammering of the economy — within two days they withdrew another $3 billion. To discourage speculation the Central Bank raised interest rates by a phenomenal 6,100%. But, just as what happened in East Asia, Brazil and elsewhere, the funds with these countries were no match for the FIIs. The government could no longer maintain exchange rate controls and as the Turkish Lira free-floated, it lost 35% of its value.

With this devaluation, it was trading at one million Lira to a US dollar. Almost overnight, millions of Turks and Kurds found their wages and savings devalued by nearly one-third. Protests broke out throughout Turkey. They wanted a cancellation of the "IMF Programme" and a sacking of the ministers responsible for the crisis. Bank employees in Istanbul held separate protests against the IMF. Dozens were arrested.

Turkey is one of the best samples of an IMF-guided economy. For several decades now, it has been under its continuous supervision, with no fewer than 17 IMF programmes introduced in the country. It has faithfully followed its instructions and orders : offering major incentives to foreign capital; offering up major state assets for privatisation; setting up a currency peg, along Argentine lines which linked the Turkish Lira to the dollar; and imposing high interest rates as part of a deflationary package. It therefore proves, without any doubt, that the IMF formula is nothing but a measure to destroy local economies and push them deeper into the tentacles of the imperialist octopus.

Each bout of liberalisation will offer only a temporary reprieve, and expose the economy even more to future crises. And when these crises occur, they will only be contained by further liberalisation and further concessions made to the insatiable foreign capital. It is a repetitive vortex which, with each cycle, pulls these economies deeper and deeper into the control of the imperialists.

Not surprisingly, no sooner had Dervis taken over, that he flew to Washington to negotiate an even larger IMF loan of $35 billion !!

 

 

<Top>

 

Home  |  Current Issue  |  Archives  |  Revolutionary Publications  |  Links  |  Subscription