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Turkey's state banks will provide a 30-billion lira ($4.9 billion) financing package to help bail out some exporting sectors such as manufacturing that were hit hard by last year's currency crisis, Finance Minister Berat Albayrak said on Thursday. Three big state banks will provide the funding by year end, Albayrak said as he announced the second state-backed package in less than two months meant to revive an economy plagued by bad debt, recession, and high inflation.
The first package announced on April 10, also worth about $4.9 billion, targeted banks. The second package focuses on Turkey's automotive and chemical sectors, among others, which are largely dependent on imports of raw materials for production before they are able to export processed goods. "Import-dependent sectors, as well as sectors contributing to employment, showing a high trade deficit are going to be supported by the financing package," Albayrak said at a presentation in Istanbul.
It will support raw material, intermediate goods, agriculture and machinery-manufacturing sectors, he said. The financing from Ziraat Bank, Halk Bank and Vakif Bank would provide loans with up to two years without principal repayment, as well as up to 10 years of maturity. The Turkish lira weakened on Thursday and did not rebound after Albayrak's announcement.
"It looks like they are now taking the issue more seriously given the size and scope of the program," said Nikolay Markov, a senior economist at Pictet Asset Management. "But these measures do not help dealing with the fundamental macro problems (and they) should be considered as temporary measures."

Copyright Reuters, 2019

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