Hot money quits Turkey

Turkey's central bank has moved to pre-empt a downturn in the economy as nervous foreign investors pull their money from stocks and bonds.

Not long ago, everyone was worrying about the Turkish economy overheating. It grew by almost 9% year-on-year in the second quarter. Credit growth was rocketing, hitting an annual pace of around 40%. That fuelled a spending boom on imports, which drove the current account deficit to unprecedented levels: it has averaged 9% of GDP over the past year.

A current account deficit means a country is in debt to the rest of the world, and has to borrow from abroad to fund growth. That leaves it vulnerable to changes in external borrowing conditions and investor sentiment, says Capital Economics. The risk is that capital flows dry up, causing domestic demand to crumble and sending the economy into recession.

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