Domain Registration

COVID-19 crisis stokes fear of food insecurity in Turkey

  • April 24, 2020

Turkey’s import appetite had grown in the first half of the past decade as cheap hard currency prices — the result of easy access to foreign funds at the time — made it convenient to buy from abroad instead of producing at home. As a result, Turkey turned into an importer of livestock and raw materials for vegetable and animal production, frustrating its own farmers. Yet, as foreign currency prices began to rise in 2014, imported agricultural and animal products as well as inputs such as fertilizers, pesticides and machinery became costlier, aggravating the problems of an import-reliant agricultural sector and insufficient domestic production. The rising cost of imports, coupled with supply shortages, fueled food inflation, which shot up further under the impact of the currency crisis in 2018. 

All those problems had yet to be overcome when the novel coronavirus outbreak hit.

The holy month of Ramadan, which this year began on April 24, is usually a time of higher food prices in Turkey as people treat themselves to lavish fast-breaking dinners. The uptick is now likely to spike further under the impact of the pandemic. In a gloomy harbinger, food prices rose nearly 2% in March, when COVID-19 officially reached Turkey, well above the 0.6% overall consumer inflation.

In the global agricultural network, Turkey has been an exporter of fresh fruits and vegetables and an importer of grains and oilseeds. Due to export restrictions by other countries, Turkey is now bound to experience hardships in importing the products it needs, creating trouble for vegetable oil producers as well as the animal feed industry and therefore the husbandry sector. Also, many food producers have come to rely on imported wheat to produce flour, pasta and other products, meaning that disruptions in the supply of raw materials could lead to idle facilities in the food industry. 

One of the biggest lessons the COVID-19 crisis is teaching Turkey is that it must learn to produce locally all those products it had carelessly imported. Obviously, this cannot be achieved overnight, even if decision-makers are prepared to go ahead with measures to do so. Yet, local farmers need to have confidence that they are being protected, encouraged and supported, especially in terms of the inputs they need.

Price increases in agricultural inputs, many of them imports, had alarmed Turkish producers even before the pandemic. In February, for instance, seed prices were up 19% on a year-on-year basis, followed by increases of 18% in fertilizer prices, 12% in fodder and 8% in pesticides. 

Such upticks have translated to increases in producer prices, which reached nearly 12% in 2018 and then 23% in 2019 before easing to 18.5% on year-on-year basis in March. This trend speaks of a sticky food inflation likely to rise further.

According to official data, the main products on which Turkey relies on imports to cover domestic demand include wheat, barley, corn, cotton, soybeans, sunflower seeds, paddy, haricot, red lentils and chickpeas. Their importation already produced hefty bills before the pandemic.

Turkey now needs urgent measures to encourage the production of those basic items in the short run. Then, in the medium term, it needs to increase output in a planned manner, based on population projections and the demand projections of agricultural industries. Barring legumes, these products require advanced cultivation techniques, including irrigation, so irrigation investment must be ramped up. 

Erdogan’s government remains under fire for focusing on stopgap measures. Wary of losing voters, it seems to concern itself with appeasing consumers through imports rather than reviving production, which requires time and patience.

Related News

Search