Turks Flee to Gold, Bitcoin, and Foreign Currency as Government Devalues Lira
Turkey shows the danger of inflation and giving officials free rein to mess with money.

The rising price of everything is hard to miss when you see it in the groceries, holiday gifts, and the tab at the fuel pump. Inflation isn't just an American problem, either, with prices rising across the world or, more accurately, the purchasing power of many nations' currencies declining. An important example is found in Turkey, where people hustle to spend or exchange paychecks denominated in the country's lira before it loses even more of its value. At a time when officials want to squeeze out independent cryptocurrencies and even eliminate anonymous cash, it's a chilling warning of the danger of giving governments free rein to mess with our money.
"The Turkish lira's rapid slide—13% in one day this month and about 38% since the beginning of the year—resulted in a wave of Turks exchanging their liras for dollars, euros and other currency," The Wall Street Journal reported last week.
The value of the currency isn't just a curiosity for foreign-exchange traders. It represents the purchasing power of people's paychecks, of the money storekeepers receive for their sales, and of the payments that companies take in for their goods and services.
"I had never experienced such a deplorable life. I go to sleep, I wake up and the prices have gone up. I bought a 5-litre can of (cooking) oil, it was 40 lira. I went back, it was 80 lira," a widowed mother of two told the AP in November. "We don't deserve this as a nation."
Officially, inflation in Turkey is running at about 20 percent, though independent economists say it's more than double that figure. As a result, while the lira can be used to make purchases, it no longer functions as a store of value. To put cash aside for a rainy day is to watch it deteriorate to the status of toilet paper. This isn't Turks' first go-round with unreliable money, which is why they long ago developed the habit of keeping part of their savings denominated in other, more-stable currencies.
"About 59% of retail bank deposits are now in foreign currencies, up from nearly 57% the week before," The Wall Street Journal added.
Dollars and euros aren't the only alternatives to the lira.
"Turks have traditionally used gold as savings and there may be as much as 5,000 tonnes of it 'under mattresses', with more added after the recent buying spree," Reuters reported last year even before the currency lost so much of its value.
Tellingly, even though Turkish banks accept deposits in both gold and foreign currency, many people avoid them out of fear the government might seize private funds to bail itself out.
"Smart Turks are keeping their savings at home, whether in gold or FX," The National Interest noted earlier this year.
Looking for a safe haven, many people also take to cryptocurrency. While volatile, independent digital currencies appear to be a better bet than a lira that loses value by the day. Bitcoin and its competitors can also be transferred over long distances and across national borders.
"The latest economic turmoil has led to a surge in cryptocurrency trading in the country, with investors hoping to gain from bitcoin's recent rally and shelter against inflation," reported The Guardian in April.
The Turkish government promptly banned the use of cryptocurrency in payments for goods and services, though trading continues.
The reason for the plunging lira is no secret. In contrast to virtually every economist on the planet, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan insists that low interest rates and cheap money fuel a thriving economy that fights inflation. His claims—dubbed "insane" in some quarters—don't seem to have done much for the value of the currency. Nevertheless, he sticks to his policy and fires officials who disagree.
Instead, what Erdogan has actually accomplished is a surging money supply that dilutes the value of the lira and has driven Turks to despair. In this, Turkey is not entirely alone, of course. While Britain, the eurozone, and the United States haven't increased the amount of money in circulation as rapidly as Turkey, similar "stimulus" efforts since the beginning of the pandemic have vastly increased dollars, euros, and pounds in circulation (measurements are in M2 since the U.S. reclassified M1 last year). As the supply of money in circulation increased, economists warned that inflation would be the result.
"This money supply growth is just so much faster than anything we've seen," Desmond Lachman, resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, cautioned Reuters in June. "It's difficult for me to see how you don't get inflation."
Sure enough, the IMF notes in its October World Economic Outlook that "Headline inflation has risen rapidly in advanced economies and emerging market and developing economies since the beginning of 2021," though it hopes for an improvement next year.
Pointing to Turkey and other countries that use printing presses to pay their bills, The Economist warned last month: "As policymakers in rich and poor countries alike confront the enormous economic and budgetary costs of covid-19, some may be tempted to depart from norms around monetary and fiscal policy. The result, in some unhappy places, could be inflation that is too hot to handle."
Fortunately, Turks have been able to preserve some of their wealth in gold, cryptocurrency, and less-unstable foreign currencies. These alternative stores of value provide safe havens from irresponsible government policies that make the lira unreliable. But, as demonstrated by the Turkish government's restrictions on crypto, officials don't like it when people flee their controls and put their wealth beyond reach. Governments around the world talk about replacing bitcoin with government-controlled digital currencies, and even eliminating traditional cash and coins to bring economies under greater central monitoring and management.
Eliminating alternatives to government-controlled currency was always a frightening idea to anybody who cares about freedom and privacy. The plight of Turkey's savers, shoppers, and businesses shows that such a move, if successfully implemented, could also impoverish us all.
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You mean to say that Turkey likes to use inflation to Gobble-Gobble-Gobble up the value of your savings? That's what Turkeys do, dammit!
More news at 11:00?
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Erdogan should talk to Biden and learn how to do this correctly
And FJB. Let's go Brandon!!!
Let's talk, Turkey.
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"We don't deserve this as a nation." Turkey got what they voted for, good and hard, and does deserve it. Only the people who voted for freedom don't deserve it.
"Erdogan insists that low interest rates and cheap money fuel a thriving economy that fights inflation."
LOL - Gaslighting exists everywhere politicians seek to rule over others rather than serve them. Just like Joe Brandon, er, Biden whatever his name is, his dementia leads me to forget him.
"We don't deserve this as a nation."
Why are they (we) always surprised when this happens? And then we (they) line up for another go at the free lunch buffet hoping for a different result.
They say the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result each time.
At UT we call that a real bad day in physics lab.
I mean, yes, technically he was elected to that position, but I'm not sure how much faith I place in those election procedures. But perhaps they truly were fair and he was actually voted in, I could be full of shit. It just seems sketchy that he was Prime Minister, which was the previous top dog position, and then they had a constitutional referendum making the president the top dog and he then won *that* position. But perhaps he's just super popular.
No, you were correct the first time. The elections are rigged, opposition candidates and journalists are arrested or "disappeared." Independent media outlets shut down, state media filled with propaganda toward the ruling party, etc.
So, take me back to Constantinople
No, you can't go back to Constantinople
Been a long time gone, Constantinople
Why did Constantinople get the works?
That's nobody's business but the Turk
The rising price of everything is hard to miss when you see it in the groceries, holiday gifts, and the tab at the fuel pump.
The only pressing concern we have in this country is the 10¢ increase in the price of a pouch of spittin’ tobaccy. Everything else is just fine.
When in Buenos Aires in the late 1980s, we experienced asome minor inflation of the currency. At the end, it was replaced at 50,000 to 1. Dollars were the solution for most. In the US, if Biden, who sounds a whole lot like Erdogan when explaining how spending more will solve inflation, gets his way, we might consider a return to silver. You can actually buy groceries with silver, but it is hard to spend a single gold coin.
Try Whole Foods.
You mean Whole Paycheck?
It's known as Whole Fools in Austin, where hepcats shop at Central Market.
so it was transitory even then
Check out William Jennings Bryant over here.
Bryan... crap, I always do that.
Was that Erdrogan explaining money as ink and paper on Gilligan's Island?
1 Decembrie. La mulți ani.
"As the supply of money in circulation increased, economists warned that inflation would be the result"
Is demand any greater now than at times in the past? If demand isn't any greater than how can you attribute the higher prices to the supply of money?
Is demand any greater now than at times in the past? If demand isn't any greater than how can you attribute the higher prices to the supply of money?
This is a tautology. It posits, or rather, questions whether there is any real growth under the inflation caused by the policy enacted to cause real growth but triggering the inflation. Questioning if there's any real growth under the policy, in defense of the policy, is shooting yourself in the dick.
This is a tautology.
Not to mention is economically stupid. It's possible to inflate a currency without concomitant rise in demand.
What a dumbass.
Supply and demand is a two-variable equation. If you increase the supply of money while keeping demand the same you get higher prices. How is that complicated?
This is why I'm in favor of not having an edit button. That way folks can't delete embarrassingly stupid posts.
Turkish lira no longer in an Istanbul market?
Seems bazaar to me.
young Turks be free tonight. time is on your side.
I've said for years that it's up to each individual to decide if they live in a place where the government is going to ruin their currency. More and more people are realizing that means them.
My heating bill just arrived. It's 54% higher than last year despite this November being slightly warmer. Buckle up buttercups. FJB has three years to go.
For decades, Turkey's secularist Kemalist military establishment kept religious politicians like Erdogan out of national leadership. Having to make do without national sources of corruption, some religious politicians learned to rule honestly and effectively in the local governments allowed to them. Meanwhile, the accepted national secularist parties gradually choked to death on corruption.
(2) By 2003, the military establishment had stepped back in hopes that Turkey might qualify as a democratic State for admission to the European Union. Erdogan came to power, and for the first ten years or so ran the economy competently. Since then, however, especially since 2018, he has picked up on the habits of corruption that brought down his secular predecessors.
He seems to have a gigantic ego - but I suppose most leaders of countries do. He also seems unwilling to admit he's wrong about anything.
I remember hearing a story about him showing up with a small entourage at for Muhammad Ali's funeral in Louisville. Turns out he wasn't invited, and was told by Ali's family (or representative with authority for the funeral events) that he would not be added to speaker list. Erdogan got mad and left. Pretty sure Ali's true friends and family were not at all bothered that Erdogan's feelings were hurt.
Hyperinflation is in a real sense a complete loss of confidence in a currency. Erdogan's ego is getting in the way - the high inflation is also a loss in confidence in his ability to be a competent leader of Turkey's government.
Coincidentally I just flew into Istanbul a couple of hours ago. I’ve been traveling so I hadn’t been paying attention to the news, but I’d seen some rumblings about the Lira. I checked it last week and it was 10.7 to the $, thenyesterday or the day before 12.88, then when I got to the airport they were giving 12.2 lira per dollar but asking 13.6. That’s a huge spread.
I guess they want to be able to make up on one end their huge losses on the other.
But I think the article is being unfair to Erfogan, how can it be insane to have low interest rates when inflation is running out of control. After all that’s what Powell is doing at the Fed isn’t it? Does that mean the Fed is insane too?
The rising price of everything is hard to miss when you see it in the groceries, holiday gifts, and the tab at the fuel pump. Inflation isn't just an American problem, either, with prices rising across the world or, more accurately, the purchasing power of many nations' currencies declining.
But an outgoing tide lowers all boats.
Erdogan needs another fake coups.
This is probably a very correct approach to the crisis. I don’t think that cryptocurrency is a bubble, because many years have passed since the creation of bitcoin. I'm sure many of you will find it helpful to know how muslims-in-bitcoin is related. This is a very profitable investment that should not be missed.
This Tuccille article ought to be translated and published in Brazil. During the APR1980-MAY1995 Biden/Reagan/Bush/Clinton wars on South American plant leaves the cumulative inflation rate went to 20,759,903,275,651%, averaged to 81% a month. From DEC1989 to MAR90 under the Biden Drug Law the rate accumulated to 693%. That was the financial disaster the 1987 market Crash warned us against. Crashes broadcast what investors have learned to expect.