ΣΧΟΛΙΟ ΙΣΤΟΛΟΓΙΟΥ : Η Τουρκία είναι στις τελευταίες μέρες της. Ο Ερντογάν έχει καταστρέψει εντελώς την οικονομία και τώρα θα χωρίσει τη χώρα σε κομμάτια. Μην ξεχνάτε ότι οι Κούρδοι οι Αλεβίτες , οι Ασσύριοι , οι Αρμένιοι και άλλοι περιμένουν τη σωστή στιγμή.
ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Huseyin Goksoy, a tailor who was so stressed about going hungry during the worst of the COVID-19 pandemic that he was briefly bedridden with a hernia, is increasingly worried about his future as Turkey strains to curb poverty.
ΠΗΓΗ
ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Huseyin Goksoy, a tailor who was so stressed about going hungry during the worst of the COVID-19 pandemic that he was briefly bedridden with a hernia, is increasingly worried about his future as Turkey strains to curb poverty.
He is not alone.
Though
a two-month lockdown ended in June, about four million Turks still rely
on state aid to get by, while even more informal workers missed out on
most of the financial support.
Polls
and academic research paint a grim picture ahead of the day when
President Tayyip Erdogan’s government is expected to lift a temporary
ban on layoffs, possibly as soon as November.
Goksoy,
48, makes face masks to help cover losses from earlier this year when
he could not get a subsidized small-business loan because there was no
guarantor in his conservative neighborhood in central Istanbul.
“People
don’t get dressed up when they don’t work, so I only repaired tears and
it was 5-10 liras ($1) a day - if that,” he said. “I still can’t send
money to my kids when they want it. If I do a bad job, I’d go hungry.”
Data
and polls show that fear and disillusionment like this are
unprecedented across the labor market. Those hardest hit are the same
Turks who benefited from years of Erdogan’s welfare policies that helped
to sharply reduce income inequalities.
One
study by Turkish economists Ayse Aylin Bayar, Oner Guncavdi and Haluk
Levent predicts the number of impoverished Turks could double this year
to nearly 20 million, and set back by two decades progress in narrowing
inequality.
That
would effectively wipe out the successes of Erdogan’s Islamist-rooted
AK Party (AKP) and could test his staunchest voter base at the next
general election set for 2023.
Goksoy
- whose shop is near the president’s childhood home - said he still
supported AKP though he would change his mind if he thought the party
was no longer honest.
UNSUSTAINABLE
Erdogan
said on Monday the economy would emerge stronger from the pandemic even
though its effects linger, adding that the government’s 100 billion
lira ($13 billion) aid program helped lower-income households.
Representatives
of the presidency and the finance ministry, which administers the aid,
did not immediately respond to questions about rising poverty.
The
aid scheme partially covers wages of many registered workers and funded
some 2 million needy households. Big cities run by the main opposition
party chipped in other funds and food supplies.
But
Turkey’s mix of low-skilled labor in which a third of workers
informally earn cash daily, a private sector dominated by small
businesses and public finances already strained from a 2018-2019
recession leaves the country uniquely vulnerable.
Reserves
at the central bank, which backstopped much of the pandemic response,
have fallen sharply and accelerated a plunge in the Turkish lira to
all-time lows. That in turn raises prices for basic imported goods.
By law, Erdogan can extend the ban on layoffs beyond November to mid-2021 to shield workers, but at a fiscal cost.
“These
are not sustainable policies,” said Guncavdi, an economist at Istanbul
Technical University who co-authored the study predicting a jump in
poverty.
“When
they are removed, there is potential for upheaval with mass layoffs, a
spike in destitution, family structures being tested and potential
demonizing of minorities and refugees.”
Turkey’s
3.6 million Syrian refugees faced backlash in past downturns, and those
left unemployed this year had little safety net.
Retired
florist Kemal Erdogan, 76, said this week he supports AKP but added
that with the poor now getting poorer it was clear Turkey welcomed too
many foreigners who are “living better lives than you and I”.
LOCKDOWN ANXIETIES
An
unprecedented collapse in employment endured after the lockdown was
lifted in June and July, driven by workers not formally on payrolls,
government data showed on Thursday.
A
record 1.4 million were too discouraged to search for work, up nearly
threefold from a year ago. Of those who had jobs last month, nearly half
were “very afraid” of losing them by winter, a poll by Istanbul
Economics Research found.
Can
Selcuki, general manager of the consultancy, said that likely reflects
workers’ suspicion that they will be laid off “the minute” the layoff
ban is lifted. He added that support for Erdogan’s ruling alliance
dipped to 44% in a poll this month, from 46% in August after a summer
bounce.
Turkey,
like several other countries, banned layoffs in April when it also
closed most businesses, shut borders and intercity travel and adopted
partial stay-at-home orders.
Large
gatherings were curbed, leaving Mehmet Coskun, a wedding drummer
without social security, only a third of his usual gigs. “I don’t know
what to do when my loan payments come along,” he said. “Perhaps I can
sell water or clean buildings.”
Such
lost jobs in the service, tourism and construction sectors are hurting
Turkey’s poorest households the most, according to the World Bank. The
bank, however, predicts that the poverty rate will rise less than
forecast in the Turkish study, to about 12% from 10%, contained in part
by the state aid.
A recent rise in coronavirus cases to early May levels only raises anxieties.
Meryem
Yildirim, who opened a women’s clothing shop in Istanbul two months
ago, said a return to lockdown was her worst nightmare.
“All
small businesses think this way now,” said the mother of two, adding
she took out a loan to pay rent and to cover a second loan on the shop.
(For a graphic on discouraged workers, click here)
(For a graphic on employment and workforce participation, click here)
($1 = 7.4894 liras)
ΠΗΓΗ
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου