ERF 26th Annual Conference

De-industrialisation and Poverty in Turkey

No.

ERF26_99

Publisher

ERF

Date

August, 2020

Topic

E2. Consumption, Saving, Production, Investment, Labor Markets, and Informal Economy

I3. Welfare, Well-Being, and Poverty

O1. Economic Development

De-industrialisation has emerged as a crucial problem in today’s developing economies, and globalisation and rapid technological progress have widely been considered as its causes. However, de-industrialisation has also been going along with a change in political discourse in some countries like Turkey, and it appears to have led to a rise in economic populism. An increase in the shares of non-tradable economic activities in value added and employment come forward as both an instrument of economic populism and the sign of de-industrialisation. Today’s populist discourse is also accompanied with high economic growth led by high non-tradable economic activities and a fall in poverty. This paper examines an empirical link between recent fall in Turkish poverty and the rise in non-tradable activities and income. De-industrialisation seems to become apparent after 2009, and non-tradable economic activities have overwhelmingly become the engine of economic growth after this year in Turkey. The result shows that non-tradable income distinctively has more reducing impacts on poverty than those of other tradable ad agricultural income. This can be regarded as one of the reason why the Turkish policy maker fulfilling populist discourse chooses non-tradable economic activities and encourage non-tradable income to rise on average more than others.
De-industrialisation and Poverty in Turkey

Authors

Ayşe Aylin Bayar

Associate Professor of Economics, Istanbul Technical University

De-industrialisation and Poverty in Turkey

Authors

Öner Günçavdı

Professor of Economic Development, Faculty of Management,...

De-industrialisation and Poverty in Turkey

Authors

Haluk Levent

Professor of Economics, Department of Management, Istanbul...