Photo: AA
Click to read the article in Turkish
Main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) Chair Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu claimed yesterday (August 25) that the foreign exchange reserves of the Central Bank are currently at minus 53 billion dollars.
In response to an earlier statement by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan that the reserves are currently at 106 billion dollars, Kılıçdaroğlu said most of this money was actually loans taken out from other countries.
"We borrowed money from China, Qatar and South Korea and put this money in the vault of the Central Bank. It's called 'swap' in economics. It's not our but other people's money," he remarked during an event in the capital, Ankara.
"The person who ruled the state said, 'The reserves of the Central Bank is at 109 billion dollars. It'll be 115 billion dollars soon. Six and a half billion dollars will come from the IMF but he can't mention the name of the IMF," said Kılıçdaroğlu.
"So, how much are the reserves of the Central Bank in reality? Let me give you the number, it's minus 53 billion 200 million dollars," he remarked.
The issue has long been discussed with the opposition and economists accusing the government of draining the Central Bank reserves in a bid to keep the US dollar's exchange rate from rising.
It is estimated that the government sold about 128 billion dollars in a couple of years to implement Erdoğan's unconventional theory that elevated interest rates cause the inflation rate to rise.
The government has denied such criticism and offered various explanations as to where the Central Bank reserves were spent.
CLICK - Erdoğan: Central Bank reserves not lost but 'changed hands'
CLICK - AKP deputy chair explains what happened to Turkey's Central Bank reserves
CLICK - Economists refute Erdoğan's statement on Central Bank reserves
CLICK - CHP leader keeps asking about the fate of Central Bank reserves
(AS/VK)