Publication: High-quality versus low-quality growth in Turkey: causes and consequences
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Acemoğlu, Daron
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N/A
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Abstract
Turkey's economy has made important strides in the 17 years since the financial crisis of 2001, averaging an annual growth rate of about 5.7%. But the quality of this growth has been poor, especially since 2007, with little-to-no productivity growth, limited technological upgrading, substantial (mis)allocation of resources to the construction sector and a huge surge in credit. This growth has also been generally unequal. This low-quality, unequal growth has been in the context of worsening economic institutions, underpinned by deteriorating political institutions.
This paper attempts to understand the causes and consequences of low-quality growth in Turkey, briefly interrupted by a period of higher-quality growth between 2002 and 2006. The main thesis of our paper is that the lack of high-quality, shared growth in Turkey is rooted in the nature and evolution of its economic institutions, which are themselves closely linked to the country's political institutions. The short episode of high-quality and more equally shared growth came as a result of institutional improvements, but duly disappeared as these institutional gains were reversed.
Source
Publisher
World Scientific Publishing
Subject
Economic growth in Turkey, Economic institutions, Quality of economic growth
Citation
Has Part
Source
Turkish Economy At The Crossroads: Facing The Challenges Ahead
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Edition
DOI
10.1142/9789811214899_0003
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