Türkiye’s soaring food prices put consumers under strain

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Photo for illustration purposes. File photo: AFP

ANKARA: Summer was usually a period when Turkish citizens have some respite from soaring prices, but it is not the case this year, reported Xinhua.

Agricultural production dropped by climate change, coupled with high inflation, has been driving food prices up – which put consumers in the country under serious strain.

According to the July inflation data announced by the Turkish Statistical Institute (TurkStat), the annual inflation rate rose to nearly 50 per cent. Among the food products with the highest price surge, vegetables have the lead by 20.1 per cent and fresh fruits by 15.7 per cent.

In a marketplace in the capital Ankara’s 100 Yil neighborhood, both customers and sellers are dissatisfied with the prices.

Ege Ozcan, a customer in his twenties, told Xinhua that compared to previous weeks, a fresh rise is on price tags in the market.

“We have to cut back on everything, from social activities to buying food products,” he complained.

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Erdogan Atas, a disillusioned watermelon seller, said that “we, as vendors, have difficulty selling our products as clients cannot afford them because of food inflation.”

“The price of watermelons has risen between 100 and 130 per cent,” he said, adding that the rising costs of farming have caused prices to soar.

According to the TurkStat, food prices have increased by 54 per cent annually in Türkiye, a rise which is continuing for 34 consecutive months, since August 2020.

Meanwhile, the Turkish central bank projected the inflation rate for food prices to reach 61 per cent at the end of 2023.

Ali Ekber Yildirim, a journalist and author specialising in agricultural industry, said on his video blog that sudden temperature changes this year have harmed the production and quality of many crops, especially tomatoes, of which Türkiye is a big producer.

“The crops deteriorated due to excessive rainfall and extreme heat,” he explained.

Rising gasoline and diesel prices increased costs not only in production but also in transportation, and thus made food more expensive.

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Along with the fluctuation in foreign exchange, fertiliser prices have increased by up to 33 per cent in July, Semsi Bayraktar, president of the Union of Chambers of Agriculture of Türkiye, said in early August.

“Food prices will continue to rise in the current conditions,” he warned.

To deal with challenges posed by the climate crisis, Türkiye’s Agriculture and Forestry Minister Ibrahim Yumakli announced plans to implement policies that aimed at improving agricultural production and supporting producers and protect consumers. – BERNAMA-XINHUA

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