Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
03ANKARA2051
2003-03-28 16:11:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Ankara
Cable title:  

SENIOR BANKING OFFICIALS CONCERNED OVER GOT ECON

Tags:  ECON PREL TU 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.

281611Z Mar 03
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 ANKARA 002051 

SIPDIS


STATE FOR E, P, EUR/SE AND EB
TREASURY FOR U/S TAYLOR AND OASIA - MILLS
NSC FOR QUANRUD AND BRYZA


E.O. 12958: DECL: 09/02/2006
TAGS: ECON PREL TU
SUBJECT: SENIOR BANKING OFFICIALS CONCERNED OVER GOT ECON
POLICY DRIFT


REF: ANKARA 2010


Classified by Econ Counselor Scot Marciel for reasons 1.5
(b,d).


C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 ANKARA 002051

SIPDIS


STATE FOR E, P, EUR/SE AND EB
TREASURY FOR U/S TAYLOR AND OASIA - MILLS
NSC FOR QUANRUD AND BRYZA


E.O. 12958: DECL: 09/02/2006
TAGS: ECON PREL TU
SUBJECT: SENIOR BANKING OFFICIALS CONCERNED OVER GOT ECON
POLICY DRIFT


REF: ANKARA 2010


Classified by Econ Counselor Scot Marciel for reasons 1.5
(b,d).



1. (C) Summary: In frank discussions March 26 and 27, BRSA
Chairman Engin Akcakoca and the outgoing Chairman of the
State Bank Board Safa Ocak told us of concerns with the lack
of market confidence in the government. They described a
situation of policy drift on the economy, with Deputy PM
Sener's influence on the wane, MinFinance Unakitan's rising
and, per Akcakoca, a PM who is impervious to the logic of
financial markets. The AK Party continues to make populist
signals to its constituencies even while implementing
reforms, they noted. Neither Akcakoca nor Ocak had solutions
to what they see as a growing risk of debt default, though
the outgoing Ocak said he hoped the U.S. would help keep
Turkey firmly anchored in the West. End Summary.



2. (C) "Trust in the government is minimal," according to
Banking Regulatory and Supervision Board Chairman Engin
Akcakoca, summing up recent contacts with the banking
community. He noted the Babacan and others are trying to
blame everything on Iraq, when in fact it's more a crisis of
confidence in the government. Asked about the market impact
of the GOT's recently announced fiscal measures, Akcakoca
said no one trusts AK to implement what they promise. "If
Dervis had made these statements, the markets would have
reacted. But not to these guys."



3. (C) Akcakoca described a March 21 meeting between PM
Erdogan and the GOT economic team (including Deputy PM Sener,
MinState Babacan, MinFin Unakitan, CenBank Governor
Serdengecti, Treasury U/S Oztrak, State Planning U/S Tiktik).
The team counseled Erdogan not to use the word "surprise,"
that the markets like stability not surprises. Erdogan
rejected the advice, saying President Bush surprises his
audiences all the time. "Erdogan is maybe a good politician
but has no understanding for economic policy. Gul was
better."



3. (C) Asked who was likely to take charge of economic
policy under Erdogan, Akcakoca pointed to Finance Minister
Unakitan. Unakitan is a problem-solver, he said. Deputy PM

Sener doesn't want to take responsibility for anything, is a
real bureaucrat, and opposes the IMF. MinState Babacan has
underperformed, lost his credibility and may well get fired.
Akcakoca noted PM Erdogan has stripped privatization away
from Sener and gave it to Unakitan.



4. (C) Akcakoca stressed the populist impulse that still
motivates AK Party. Sener, in his March 26 statement on
privatization (reftel),had again assured the Turkish public
that privatization won't lead to public sector lay-offs.
Meanwhile, Akcakoca continued, he had had to lay-off nearly
30,000 in the banking sector in the process of intervening
and resolving 20 banks over the past two years. He is facing
several ongoing law suits for doing it. The state bank board
had laid off another 35,000 in the state banks. "Sener and
AK don't trust the IMF. His solution is to print money."



5. (C) Asked how this mood of pessimism will affect upcoming
debt roll-overs, Akcakoca said the banks will roll-over their
T-bill portfolios on April 8, but won't want to increase
their T-bill exposure. He sees default risks increasing,
given the short maturities of T-bill issuances (likely three
months) and high interest rates.
implying the default.



6. (C) Outgoing Chairman of the State Bank Board Safa Ocak
told us on March 28 he was confident that after two years of
independent operations (under first Vural Akisik and then
him),the state banks were in good shape. It would be
difficult, he ventured, for the GOT to shift them back to
providing subsidized loans at GOT instruction. Ocak said it
would be difficult to privatize Halk Bank this year, though
he had initially hoped to do so, given worsening market
sentiment.



7. (C) Ocak, like Akcakoca, is concerned with market
sentiment. He noted, "this government continues to widen its
existing credibility gap with the markets." Asked about the
state banks' ability to help the Treasury meet additional
debt roll-over demands, Ocak said the state banks will
continue to participate in debt auctions, and they had helped
the GOT at the March 17 auction when demand had been low, but
their ability to absorb additional T-bill exposure was quite
limited.



8. (C) Ocak closed by underscoring a widely felt concern in
the financial community here with maintaining strong U.S. -
Turkish relations. "Since childhood, we have been lullabyed
by the notion that 'Turkey is geo-strategically important.'
It may be true, but it was used to blur our realities and
give us a false sense of grandeur. Now we're beginning to
face realities, and we need the U.S. to be patient. Turks
tend to listen to the West more than some others do. I
believe the U.S. has the ability to keep us firmly anchored
in the West."
PEARSON