Turkey's president on Wednesday dismissed an alleged $128 billion deficit in the Central Bank's foreign exchange reserves as inaccurate, criticizing a "campaign pursued over this figure."
"Neither the number is true, nor the meaning attributed to the number, nor the campaign pursued over this figure. Wrong from beginning to end. Ignorance from beginning to end," Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said at the parliamentary group meeting of his ruling Justice and Development (AK) Party.
During his address in the capital Ankara, Erdoğan said the reserves were neither given away to anyone nor wasted.
Erdoğan claimed that developments in the global economy in 2019 and 2020 forced the Central Bank to make significant foreign exchange transactions.
"Especially 2020 was a tough year both for the world and Turkey," he said.
Financial measures taken by various countries to fight the novel coronavirus pandemic totaled $16 trillion and budget expansions by central banks reached $10 trillion, Erdoğan underlined.
"This turbulent economic climate affected our country negatively, for sure," he noted, adding that the country's current deficit had widened while its income from tourism slipped.
Demand for foreign currencies rose during this period, driven by foreign capital outflows and the real sector's efforts to reduce its debts in foreign currencies.
Tendencies among people to convert their savings into foreign currencies and gold also created additional demand, he said.
"During the last two years, $30 billion from the sources of the Central Bank were used to finance the current deficit," Erdoğan stressed, adding that foreign capital outflows had reached $31 billion.
He added that the demand of the real sector for foreign exchange to pay off their debts amounted to $50 billion, while regular people bought $54 billion worth of foreign currencies and gold as savings.
"As you can see, only four items yielded a figure of $165 billion," the president underlined, adding that this amount was used to finance the current deficit, real sector debt, foreign capital outflows and public needs.
He said that the reserves used in meeting the demand of all parties for transactions that require foreign currency, from importers to investors, the real sector to the public.
"For a long time, our Central Bank hasn't been making these transactions through auctions, but through the market-maker banks working on a 24-hour basis to avoid midnight operations towards our country in Asian markets."
If the Turkish Central Bank had not met the demand for foreign exchange without hesitation, the situation would be far worse, Erdoğan said, citing Turkey's economic crises of 1994 and 2001, he added.
Erdoğan reiterated that he restructured early Wednesday the Family, Labor Social Services Ministry to establish the two new ministries, and he also appointed three new ministers.
Erdoğan thanked former Family, Labor Social Services Minister Zehra Zümrüt Selçuk and former Trade Minister Ruhsar Pekcan for their services.
"I wish success to Family and Social Services Minister Derya Yanık, Labor and Social Security Minister Prof. Dr. Vedat Bilgin and new Trade Minister Mehmet Mus with whom we will work together in our cabinet," he said.
Mehmet Muş has an undergraduate degree in business from Turkey's Akdeniz University, a postgraduate degree in economics from Washington State University in the US and a doctoral degree from Turkey's Marmara University in economic history. He has been a member of parliament for the last four terms of government.
Derya Yanık, a lawyer, has an undergraduate degree in the field of law from Turkey's Istanbul University.
Vedat Bilgin has an undergraduate degree in social and administrative sciences from Turkey's Hacettepe University, a postgraduate degree in urbanization and industrialization and a doctoral degree in economic sociology from Istanbul University.
Bilgin, a former MP, was a lecturer at several universities, including York University in the UK, Michigan University in the US and Turkey's Gazi University. He was also a counselor to the president.