Turkey’s foreign trade deficit is on the drop

Turkey’s foreign trade deficit dropped by 23 percent during the Jan-Oct. period, lowering to 69.5 billion dollars.



Over the past ten months, exports have increased by 13.4 percent reaching 126.3 billion dollars, while imports have dropped by 2.9 percent, regressing to 195.8 billion dollars.

In October alone, exports increased by 11.6 percent, reaching 13.29 billion dollars. Imports during the same time frame decreased by 5.6 percent, dropping down to 18.8 billion dollars.

The foreign trade deficit in October also dropped by a whopping 31.2 percent, reaching 5.5 billion dollars which was way below expectations.

While the share in exports has regressed to 40 percent, exports to the EU increased by one percent compared to the same month the year prior reaching 5.3 billion dollars.

The highest number of imports in October went to Germany. Exports to Germany did see a drop by 8.5 percent compared to last October however, dropping to 1.109 billion dollars.

Germany was followed by Iraq with 930 million dollars, England with 900 million dollars and the United Arab Emirates with 688 million dollars. At 1.5 billion dollars, precious stones and metals were the top exported items.

The deficit excluding energy was at the lowest level seen since October 2010. Economy Minister Zafer Çağlayan says the 13.2 billion dollars worth of exports this past October marks the highest monthly export rate ever seen. "A record was broken on a monthly basis," states Çağlayan.