BTI 2020 Country Report
Turkey
This report is part of the Bertelsmann Stiftung’s Transformation Index (BTI) 2020. It covers
the period from February 1, 2017 to January 31, 2019. The BTI assesses the transformation
toward democracy and a market economy as well as the quality of governance in 137 countries.
More on the BTI at https://www.bti-project.org.
Please cite as follows: Bertelsmann Stiftung, BTI 2020 Country Report — Turkey. Gütersloh:
Bertelsmann Stiftung, 2020.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
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BTI 2020 | Turkey
3
Key Indicators
Population
M
Pop. growth1
% p.a.
1.5
Life expectancy
years
77.2
UN Education Index
0.712
Poverty3
%
1.8
75.1
Gender inequality2
0.305
Aid per capita $
38.7
Urban population %
82.3
HDI
HDI rank of 189
0.807
59
GDP p.c., PPP $
Gini Index
27893
41.9
Sources (as of December 2019): The World Bank, World Development Indicators 2019 | UNDP, Human Development
Report 2019. Footnotes: (1) Average annual growth rate. (2) Gender Inequality Index (GII). (3) Percentage of
population living on less than $3.20 a day at 2011 international prices.
Executive Summary
The review period saw the emerging outline of a “new Turkey.” The country saw a radical
transformation in domestic politics and in its international relations. Concerning domestic politics,
Turkey has become increasingly shaped by nationalist, Islamist and authoritarian forces. In a
presidential reform referendum held in April 2017, Turkish citizens approved (51.41% in favor) a
series of constitutional changes that introduced a new presidential system. Despite concerns raised
by the international community and the EU in particular, the ruling Justice and Development Party
(AKP) moved ahead with its plan to increasingly concentrate power in the president.
Under the new system, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan was re-elected in a snap presidential
election in June 2018. This election effectively brought an end to Turkey’s parliamentary system,
which had been in place since the foundation of the modern Republic of Turkey in 1923: Erdoğan’s
AKP secured a majority bloc in the Grand National Assembly with the support of the right-wing
Nationalist Movement Party (Milliyetçi Hareket Partisi/MHP) through a general election held on
the same day as the presidential election. International observers voiced criticism of the election
process, with many stating that “the election process was free, but largely unfair.”
The new presidential system grants excessive powers to an unaccountable president and
undermines the fundamental aspects of a democratic system. The rule of law has been eroded and
fundamental freedoms have been further restricted. This marks an acceleration of the process of
autocratization that was already underway in the country. Despite the fact that the state of
emergency imposed after the failed coup attempt in July 2016 was lifted in July 2018, Turkey is
nevertheless becoming increasingly authoritarian.
The polarization of Turkish society into two opposing camps has continued unabated. Erdoğan
appears to pursue a non-inclusive governance model embedded in a majoritarian understanding of
democracy.
The domestic process of autocratization has had far-reaching consequences for Turkey’s
international relations. The country’s relations with the EU and the United States have rapidly
BTI 2020 | Turkey
deteriorated. Turkey’s EU accession negotiations have stalled, and its bilateral relations with
several individual EU member states (in particular Austria, Germany and the Netherlands) have
worsened, in part relating to the constitutional referendum. Due to diverging interests and
approaches to some key issues (e.g., Syria, Iran, perceived terrorist threats from the Fetullah Gülen
movement and the primarily Kurdish People’s Protection Units, Yekîneyên Parastina Gel, YPG),
relations with the United States remain tense. At the same time, Turkey’s rapprochement with
Russia was a source of concern for Turkey’s Western allies. In particular, the Turkish decision to
buy S-400 missile defense systems from Russia has raised interoperability problems with NATO.
In August 2018, Turkey’s economy was hit by a currency crisis that slowed economic growth and
caused an increase in inflation. A series of measures taken by the new economics minister, Berat
Albayrak, have failed to remedy the serious weaknesses in the economy. On the contrary, his
nomination raised concerns about the efficiency and independence of economic administration in
the country, as Albayrak is Erdoğan’s son-in-law.
As of January 2019, Turkey’s three major problems are the worsening economic situation, rising
authoritarianism, and a deep polarization of society.
History and Characteristics of Transformation
The 1923 proclamation of the Republic of Turkey by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk triggered a
comprehensive restructuring of the former Ottoman society, amalgamating Western and preIslamic cultures to create a new “Turkish nation.” Atatürk succeeded in many of his modernizing
reforms. The period after his death in 1938 was marked by the introduction of multiparty
democracy in 1946 and an initial period of economic growth under the leadership of İsmet İnönü.
The period from 1960 onward saw political repression and economic deterioration, accompanied
by military coups in 1960, 1971 and 1980. The signing of an association agreement with the
European Economic Community in 1963 (Ankara Agreement) was somewhat thwarted by the
invasion of Cyprus in 1974. A resulting U.S. embargo hit the country hard economically.
After the army had assumed power from 1980 until 1983, with all political parties dissolved and
new parties allowed to form only after initial screening by the military, the next civilian
government was led by Turgut Özal. He pursued a different economic policy, aiming to end the
hitherto dependence on import substitution and agricultural produce, and to instead create an
export-oriented industry. These new liberal economic policies led to an acceleration of economic
growth and a reduction in the size of the chronic foreign currency deficit. However, these policies
also led to serious budget deficits, which resulted in two severe economic crises in 1994 and 2001.
Cooperation with the IMF and World Bank since 2002 has led to a significant number of reforms.
These reforms managed to stabilize the economy and enhance the functionality of the Turkish
state under civilian leadership.
4
BTI 2020 | Turkey
Following a remarkable political reform process and rapid democratization, Turkey eventually
began accession negotiations with the EU in October 2005. Through subsequent (mainly EUinduced) reforms, the Turkish military was brought under firm civilian control, and a series of
political alterations initiated, such as the banning of the death penalty in 2004.
This primarily happened under the leadership of Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who founded the AKP
party in 2001 and was elected prime minister in 2003. With his blending of Islamic values and
economic reforms, he won the support of the growing middle class of entrepreneurs in central
Turkey, the “Anatolian tigers,” and during AKP’s first term, Turkey was promoted as a success
story of the marrying of moderate Islam and democracy. In fact, Turkey under AKP leadership
was seen as “model” for many of the Middle Eastern countries after the outbreak of the “Arab
Spring” in 2011.
However, from 2011 a combination of international and domestic factors has resulted in the
reversal of the reform process in Turkey. Erdoğan has become increasingly authoritarian, as more
moderate members of the AKP government, like former president, Abdullah Gül (2007-2014), and
former foreign minister (2009-2014) and prime minister (2014-2016), Ahmet Davutoğlu, left their
offices. In August 2014, after a change to the electoral law, Erdoğan became Turkey’s first directly
elected president, transforming this formerly mere representative office into the country’s real seat
of power.
The coup attempt in July 2016, allegedly masterminded by the Gülen movement, provoked an
acceleration of Turkey’s autocratization process, leading to an unprecedented crackdown on
regime critics. Tens of thousands of public employees, among them police staff, school teachers
and university professors were also dismissed. A controversial referendum in April 2017 that
confirmed Erdoğan’s constitutional changes and the establishment of a presidential republic,
eventually ended Turkey’s long tradition as a parliamentary democracy.
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BTI 2020 | Turkey
6
The BTI combines text analysis and numerical assessments. The score for each
question is provided below its respective title. The scale ranges from 1 (worst) to
10 (best).
Transformation Status
I. Political Transformation
1 | Stateness
The state has a monopoly on the use of force over the entire physical territory of the
country. However, military clashes continue to take place between Turkish armed
forces and the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in the south-east of the country.
Mainly due to the war in Syria, which altered the nature of Turkey’s Kurdish problem,
PKK have conducted several terrorist attacks in Turkey’s large cities in 2016.
Although clashes with the PKK have shifted from urban to rural areas, causing fewer
civilian casualties, the situation in the south-east continues to pose the greatest
security challenge to Turkey. The security risks emanating from the PKK remain
high, and the government has intensified its fight against it.
Turkey’s borders with Iraq and especially Syria remain causes of concern for the
Turkish government. State control in these border regions is limited and continues to
be contested, primarily by Kurdish PKK militants. In order to secure the control of
the porous borders with Syria and Iraq, to fight against the Islamic State (IS) as well
as terrorist threats emanating from the Kurdish regions in Syria and Iraq, the Turkish
government conducted airstrikes against camps run by the PKK in the Kurdish region
of Iraq and has undertaken cross-border operations in Syria, including in Idlib
(October 2017) and Operation Olive Branch (January 2018). The Operation Olive
Branch was launched in cooperation with the Free Syrian Army in northern Syrian
(Afrin), and aimed to root out the Democratic Union Party/People’s Protection Units
(PYD/YPG), considered by the Turkish government to be a terrorist organization
linked to the PKK.
Following the failed coup in July 2016, the government’s primary focus has been
purging the Gülen movement from state structures, especially the army and
intelligence service. Under the state of emergency, through the extensive purge since
July 2016, the government has established full control over the entire country. This
accomplished, the government lifted the state of emergency on 18 July 2018.
Question
Score
Monopoly on the
use of force
8
BTI 2020 | Turkey
According to article 66 of the Turkish constitution, “everyone bound to the Turkish
state through the bond of citizenship is a Turk.” Turkish nationality is thus based on
a modern constitutional citizenship and not on ethnicity. However, despite the fact
that all citizens are entitled to the same civil rights, and in spite of any discrimination
based on cultural, religious or ethnic being outlawed, there remain widespread
negative attitudes toward minority groups. Members of religious and ethnic
minorities continue to be practically excluded from certain professional positions,
such as civil servant and military officer. Hate speeches and threats targeting religious
or ethnic minorities remain a serious problem. Cultural rights of Kurdish minority
remain limited, including legal restrictions on mother tongue education in primary
and secondary schools (European Commission). Emergency decrees under the state
of emergency curtailed the cultural rights of Kurds. However, with the exception of
militant Kurdish organizations, all Turkish citizens, including cultural, religious and
ethnic minorities, accept the official concept of the Turkish nation-state.
7
State identity
8
The approximately four million Syrian refugees under “temporary protection” are
prohibited from acquiring Turkish citizenship. After an amendment to the law on
citizenship in 2017, acquiring Turkish citizenship has been made easier for
foreigners. As a result, more than 30,000 Syrian individuals were naturalized.
Although AKP had raised hopes that it would align democratic and individual rights
with Islam, it failed to meet these expectations. Instead, the government has pursued
policies that furthered the Islamization of the country, promoting religion,
conservative “national moral” values, and limiting individual freedoms and rights.
In September 2017, the government introduced a new curriculum for schools, putting
more emphasis on Sunni religious values and reducing teaching time on secular,
republican values. Alongside the elimination of evolution from the high school
curriculum and the inclusion of Islamic concepts such as jihad, the government
expanded the number of religious schools (İmam Hatip), abandoning to a great extent
secular, scientific and contemporary education.
Since 2006, the Turkish government has inaugurated a record number of mosques:
from 78,608 mosques in 2006 to 90,000 in 2018. The number of mosques exceeds
the number of schools in compulsory education in Turkey (65,568 schools in 2018).
Furthermore, Diyanet, Turkey’s directorate of religious affairs, now occupies a
central role in Turkish politics. Since 2017, provincial and district muftis may
conclude civil marriages, undermining the secular civil code.
The increasing influence of Sunni Islam is felt in every aspect of social and cultural
life in Turkey, from the education system to architecture, high taxes on alcohol and
the repressive climate toward gender issues.
No interference of
religious dogmas
5
BTI 2020 | Turkey
The administrative system works reasonably well. Numerous administrative reforms
have been introduced since 2003. Most notably, exceptionally good progress has been
made on the introduction and establishment of e-government. However, the
government’s extensive purge since the July 2016 coup attempt has resulted in
serious backsliding in the area of public service and human resources management.
In particular, the impact of extensive dismissals as well as the politicization of the
administration both pose a risk to an effective administrative system.
8
Basic
administration
7
There is an urgent need to ensure a fair, effective and transparent administrative
process for individuals dismissed from public service positions, as well as overall
accountability of the administration. The consolidation of extensive executive powers
in the presidency has resulted in Turkey moving away from a meritocratic
administration system.
2 | Political Participation
The majority of analysts agree that the public referendum and
parliamentary/presidential elections, held in April 2017 and June 2018 respectively,
were to a great extent free but not fair.
Events during the run-up to the referendum raised serious concerns. Under the state
of emergency, the ruling party controlled the majority of media and communication
channels, and the government widely bypassed parliament with its decrees, even on
issues related to the campaign process. For example, an emergency decree removed
the authority of the supreme election council to penalize private media channels for
making one-sided broadcasts during election and referendum campaigns. This was a
move criticized by the European Commission. The Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe’s (OSCE) international referendum observation mission
highlighted serious irregularities in the election campaigns, particularly in relation to
unfair media coverage, including self-censorship and the limitations on fundamental
freedoms and misuse of state resources to support Erdoğan. Furthermore, the OSCE
observed that the instructions issued on referendum day that related to the validity
criteria for ballots not only removed a key safeguard, but also breached the existing
law.
Similar irregularities were observed during the 2018 parliamentary and presidential
elections, through which Erdoğan was re-elected for a second term in the first round
of a snap presidential election. According to the OSCE, the restrictive legal
framework and exceptional powers granted under the state of emergency limited
fundamental freedoms of assembly and expression. Opposition candidates were
disadvantaged in several ways. Several members of the People’s Democratic Party
(HDP), including its two co-chairs Selahattin Demirtaş and Figen Yüksekdağ,
remained in pre-trial detention and could not campaign freely. A parliamentarian
from the main opposition party CHP (Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi, Republican People’s
Free and fair
elections
6
BTI 2020 | Turkey
9
Party), was arrested and initially sentenced to 25 years imprisonment. There were
several legal amendments such as replacing political party representatives with civil
servants as chairpersons of the ballot box committees, allowing the relocation of
polling stations on security grounds, increasing the authority of law enforcement at
polling stations and validating unstamped ballots. These all served to undermine the
integrity of the elections (OSCE). According to the OSCE, at least 1,090 polling
stations were relocated and merged based on security considerations.
Despite the case law of the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), previous
recommendations by the Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights, the
Council of Europe and the EU, the 10% threshold (share of the vote, to be allocated
seats in parliament, one of the highest thresholds in the world) continues to severely
restrict the number of political parties able to enter parliament and represents a serious
hurdle to political pluralism.
The elected government has the effective power to govern, and the reforms of the
past have effectively removed all the traditional veto players that previously included
the military, bureaucracy and the judiciary. The extensive purge against the alleged
2016 coup plotters ensured the government’s absolute control over the military and
judiciary.
Effective power to
govern
10
As noted by Gürkan (2018), the transition to the presidential system in June 2018
consolidated the concentration of power in the president’s office. The dominance of
a one-person executive is ensured through the president’s unrestrained powers to
appoint and remove vice-presidents and other high state officials, as well as his
enhanced veto over legislation, supplemented with the authority to issue legislative
decrees and discretionary emergency powers. The introduction of presidential
decrees under the new system in effect results in legislative powers being partially
transferred from parliament to the president.
Although the Turkish legal framework concerning freedom of assembly includes
general guarantees of respect for human and fundamental rights, these rights have
been undermined by a number of emergency decrees issued since July 2016. The
European Commission has criticized these developments, and observers note a
serious backsliding in the area of freedoms of assembly and association in Turkey,
moving them further away from EU standards.
Notwithstanding the lifting of the state of emergency in July 2018, freedom of
assembly and association continue to be severely restricted since the failed coup, in
law and in practice. Organizing demonstrations has become almost impossible, with
security forces regularly using disproportionate force to dispel “illegal” gatherings.
Several attempted demonstrations, including May Day celebrations by leftist and
labor groups, LGBT events, and marches by purge victims and opposition party
meetings have been dispersed by police, usually with force.
Association /
assembly rights
4
BTI 2020 | Turkey
The right to freedom of expression has been significantly eroded since the Gezi events
in 2013 and at an accelerated pace since the 2016 coup attempt. The few remaining
independent newspapers and dissident voices face political pressure, criminal charges
and are routinely targeted by the executive and the dominant partisan media. As of
November 2018, Reporters Without Borders have documented more than 160
imprisoned journalists in Turkey. 189 media outlets have been shut down since July
2016. Turkey’s position in the World Press Freedom Index has progressively
decreased from 151 in 2016 to 155 in 2017 and 157 in 2018 (out of 180 countries).
10
Freedom of
expression
3
Despite the lifting of the state of emergency in July 2018, systematic intimidation and
harassment of journalists, self-censorship, and restrictive measures against media
outlets continue. This is primarily due to the provisions concerning national security
and the proclaimed fight against terrorism, leaving no room for the expression of
alternative views. As the European Commission concluded in a 2018 progress report,
“criminal cases against journalists, human rights defenders, writers, or social media
users, the withdrawal of press cards, and the closure of numerous media outlets or the
appointment by the government of trustees to administer them” have become
widespread. Similarly, universities are under strict control and self-censorship has
become quite a routine.
Legal stipulations allow the government to block websites without a court order.
Several online information sources, including Wikipedia, remain blocked.
3 | Rule of Law
Through the 2017 constitutional amendments and Turkey’s transition to a presidential
system, checks and balances between parliament, the president and high courts have
been eroded. This loss of control, which must be seen as a grave danger to Turkish
democracy, is embedded in several controversial articles in the amended constitution.
For example, the amended constitution abolished parliament’s right to interpellation
of the president and its right to audit the government. The president, who holds the
combined offices of head of state, head of government and head of the ruling party,
remains accountable with five-year intervals to the electorate, but not to parliament
in its daily business. Furthermore, the new system has made the impeachment
procedure against the president highly unlikely to be effective, as it now requires at
least two-thirds of deputies (400 deputies out of 600) to vote in favor of any action.
Separation of
powers
3
BTI 2020 | Turkey
Already severely damaged by the 2010 constitutional reforms and the December
2013 corruption investigations, the independence of the judiciary has been eroded
further since the 2016 coup attempt. The purge that followed the failed 2016 coup
affected many lawyers and judges. According to Turkey Purge, a group of journalists
who monitor human rights abuses in Turkey, 4,463 judges and prosecutors (more
than one-fifth of the pre-purge number) have been dismissed.
11
Independent
judiciary
3
The new system poses further serious challenges to judicial independence since the
president acquired the authority to directly appoint 12 out of 15 judges of the
Constitutional Court, as well as six members (out of 13) of the council of judges and
prosecutors. The latter is the key institution responsible for the appointment, transfer
and evaluation of performances and promotions of judges and prosecutors. It will
now be entirely controlled by the executive.
From 2015 to 2018, Turkey fell from 80 (out of 102 countries) to 101 (out of 113
countries) in the World Justice Project’s rule of law index. In April 2017, in light of
concerns over respect for human rights, democracy and the rule of law in Turkey, the
parliamentary assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) decided to reinstate its full
monitoring of Turkey. This had been stopped in 2005.
In general, state and society hold civil servants accountable and conflicts of interest
are resolved, although high-level officials and politicians enjoy different treatment.
For example, corruption charges against members of the government and their
families which emerged in December 2013 were not properly investigated; police and
judicial officials faced considerable harassment by the government.
Prosecution of
office abuse
5
Since the 2016 attempted coup, however, mass arrests and dismissals have become
tools in the government’s fight against the Gülen movement. International analysts
see a lack of proportionality, suspecting that the government’s actions simply serve
to consolidate the president’s power.
Under the amended constitution, the system has become more prone to arbitrary rule.
It lacks transparency and legal/administrative control, since the president directly
appoints and nominates civil servants and high-level officials.
Under the state of emergency (July 2016 – July 2018), the council of ministers issued
more than 30 decrees. Through these decrees, civil liberties were restricted, while
police powers and those of prosecutors were expanded for investigations and
prosecutions. The arrests and widespread dismissals of civil servants, academics,
military officers, judges and prosecutors severely restricted fundamental freedoms
and civil rights. Many detainees have not been informed of the charges against them
and have had to wait a considerable time before stand trial. The reinstatement of the
death penalty is currently under discussion.
The European Commission, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for
Human Rights and PACE’s Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights have
Civil rights
3
BTI 2020 | Turkey
12
identified a number of serious shortcomings regarding fundamental freedoms, the
rule of law and civil rights.
In recent years, the ECHR has ruled in numerous judgments that Turkey has been
guilty of violating the European Convention on Human Rights. Human rights
institutions continue to suffer a lack of resources, independence and efficacy. Some
human rights defenders even face criminal proceedings. While civilian oversight of
the army and security forces remains stable, judicial control of intelligence has
weakened.
4 | Stability of Democratic Institutions
The 2017 constitutional amendments limit checks and balances and undermine the
separation of powers in favor of the president. They abolished the prime minister’s
office and curtailed the legislative powers of the Grand National Assembly. The
president acquired absolute authority over the appointment and dismissal of senior
government officials. He now has the authority to declare a state of emergency and
rule by presidential decrees on executive matters outside the scope of the law. He can
indirectly dissolve parliament by calling for new parliamentary and presidential
elections. The president can also veto laws and control the judiciary through the
appointment of members of the council of judges and prosecutors, and the judges of
the Constitutional Court.
Performance of
democratic
institutions
3
With regard to these changes, the Venice Commission concluded in 2017 that “by
removing necessary checks and balances, the [constitutional] amendments would not
follow the model of a democratic presidential system based on the separation of
powers, and instead would risk degeneration into an authoritarian presidential
system.”
All relevant political and social players, with the exception of the PKK and its
successor organizations, used to accept the democratic institutions as legitimate.
However, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s narrow victory in the June 2018 snap elections
(52.5%) points to the crystallization of Turkish society’s deep polarization between
two opposing camps: pro and contra Erdoğan, as described by Gürkan (2018). On the
evening of the elections, Erdoğan promised to embrace all the segments of society,
but under the new system, he has pursued policies resembling the majoritarian
understanding of democracy. He has not pursued pro-reconciliation policies. In light
of Erdoğan’s performance during the review period, it is possible to conclude that
rather than being committed to democracy and democratic institutions, his policies
are intended to consolidate his power by altering the rules of a functioning democratic
system (through constitutional changes in 2017) and by silencing the opposition
(through restrictions on the media, civil society and opposition parties). While
curbing the power of democratic institutions (mainly the parliament and political
parties), the president claims to draw his authority directly from the people. This
Commitment to
democratic
institutions
3
BTI 2020 | Turkey
13
claim excludes those who did not vote for him, hence leading to further polarization
in society and contestation of the new system by a sizeable segment of the population.
In the new Turkey, the president has emerged as the main agent eroding democracy.
5 | Political and Social Integration
Due to the high 10% electoral threshold, just four parties have dominated Turkish
politics. While the Republican People’s Party (CHP) is the country’s oldest party,
founded by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk and thus dedicated to upholding the Kemalist
nationalist ideology, it was AKP (Justice and Development Party) as an Islamist party
that has been in power since 2002 and has increasingly consolidated its power. At the
extreme nationalist end of the party spectrum stands the Nationalist Movement Party
(MHP). The People’s Democratic Party (HDP) is a pro-Kurdish party, advocating the
transformation of Turkey into a more democratic, tolerant, and multicultural country.
Party system
6
The İyi Party (Good Party) has emerged as a new political party in October 2017. It
primarily comprises MHP defectors, who left MHP after the party’s support for a
“Yes” vote in the 2017 constitutional referendum. The Good Party has adopted a
conservative, nationalist and secularist line, criticizing the AKP and its close ally
MHP for pursuing an anti-democratic agenda.
In the first parliament under the new presidential system, AKP (which held 290 out
of 600 seats) formed an alliance with MHP (50 seats). CHP, HDP and İYİ were in
opposition, securing 142, 65 and 35 seats respectively. MHP and AKP established an
electoral alliance for the 2018 presidential election (People’s Alliance) in order to
secure Erdoğan’s re-election. This large conservative and nationalist alliance reflects
the rising tide of conservative nationalism in Turkey. Following the deep polarization
in the country, the possibility for inter-party dialog in parliament remains very
limited. In particular the HDP has been stigmatized and marginalized: several HDP
members were deprived of their seats and imprisoned for allegedly supporting
terrorist activities.
All parties in Turkey lack democratic intraparty structures.
More than 115,000 associations and several hundred unions and chambers are still
active in Turkey. However, as a result of the state of emergency and the Turkish
government’s anti-terror measures, several activists came under increasing pressure,
including being subject to arrest and detainment. In particular, those NGOs that
receive foreign funding risk being accused of spying and collaborating with foreign
enemies. Through emergency decrees, around 1,400 associations have been closed
without any legal recourse.
Despite this serious backsliding, civil society organizations are still active. However,
it is clear that pro-government organizations are assuming a greater role and are more
Interest groups
5
BTI 2020 | Turkey
14
visible. In Turkey’s increasingly repressive political environment, the legal, political,
financial and administrative burdens imposed on civil society organizations prevent
the emergence of a vibrant civil society.
Turkish citizens remain committed to democracy despite low level of trust in existing
democratic institutions and political parties. The widespread overall support for
democracy among Turks was reflected in the reaction to the coup attempt, as civilians
took to the streets in protest. However, most Turks are dissatisfied with the
functioning of the democratic system in Turkey; thus, general trust in democratic
institutions is decreasing.
Approval of
democracy
n/a
While the gendarmerie is the most trusted institution in Turkey, trust in all the other
democratic institutions is low (below 55%). With Turkey’s transformation into a
presidential system, citizens’ trust in the presidency fell from 56.5% in 2017 to 44.1%
in 2018. Trust in the armed forces decreased from 60% to 51.2%, yet the army
remains the second most trusted institution in Turkey (as of January 2019).
Unsurprisingly, the least trusted institution is once again the media (31.9% in January
2019), as it has been for the last three years.
Polls conducted by Kadir Has university in January 2019 found that despite
decreasing level of confidence in the presidency, 46.7% of Turkish citizens support
the presidential system. As with the results of the April 2017 referendum on the
constitutional amendments (51.41% in favor) and the 2018 presidential elections
(52.59% voting for Erdoğan), this indicates the country’s division between Erdoğan
supporters and his opponents. The anti-Erdoğan bloc is comprised of several parties
bringing together different segments of society, united in their opposition to Erdoğan
and in their demand for democracy.
Democracy is not listed among the most important problems for Turkish citizens. The
main concerns of the electorate are unemployment, increasing food prices, and the
fight against terrorism, in particular the Gülen movement, which the Turkish
government consistently refers to as “FETÖ terrorist organization” (Fetullahçı Terör
Örgütü).
Autonomous, self-organized groups and voluntary associations are traditionally welldeveloped and well-organized. They work and cooperate well with each other. They
enjoy a high level of trust among the population. However, the legal framework and
repressive government policies have negatively affected civil society organizations
in recent years.
Turkish society is deeply divided along ethnic, political and religious fault lines.
While the Kurdish issue is one of the divisive lines (Kurds vs Turks), Turkish society
is also divided politically (conservative nationalists vs modernists) and religiously
(Sunni Islamists versus secularists). In recent years, the political elite’s divisive
discourse has further aggravated these fault lines. The turbulent political context and
Social capital
5
BTI 2020 | Turkey
15
successive elections have contributed to a polarization and division of society into
two opposing camps: supporters of Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and his opponents.
Surveys point to a high level of tolerance and solidarity among Turkish population.
However, high level of trust and tolerance among the population decreases
considerably vis-à-vis LGBT+ groups, ethnic minorities and non-Muslims. 53.8% of
society is unwilling to live in the same neighborhood as an LGBT+ person. Syrians
(refugees), Armenians and other non-Muslim ethnic groups are also among the least
trusted neighbors.
II. Economic Transformation
6 | Level of Socioeconomic Development
Despite the economic turbulence resulting from the 2016 coup attempt, war in
neighboring countries, and a massive influx of approximately 4 million refugees, the
Turkish economy continues to thrive. Since 2000, rapid growth and increasing levels
of FDI have led to increased employment and higher incomes, turning Turkey into
an upper-middle-income country in World Bank terms, at rank 64 in the UNDP’s
2017 Human Development Index (scoring 0.79). Laudably, the poverty rate has
continued to decline (1.6% of the population according to the World Bank
Development Indicators, 2015). Although incidences of poverty more than halved
over the period 2002 to 2015, and extreme poverty fell even faster, the European
Commission identified the overall risk of poverty as increasing slightly in recent
years. Unemployment numbers have been on the rise since 2012.
Turkey continues to be a country in which ethnicity, gender, and place of residence
strongly influence access to education and well-paying jobs. Income inequality
remains comparatively high, with a Gini coefficient of 0.404 in 2016. Extreme
income disparities between rural and urban regions continue, particularly in the east
and southeast regions of the country, where the average household income is only
one-third of certain western provinces. Gender inequality has slightly declined, but
considerable disadvantages for female workers continue to exist in the labor market.
Overall, the reduction of gender inequality is fairly remarkable: according to UNDP’s
Gender Inequality Index, Turkey reduced gender inequality from 0.419 in 2010 to
0.317 in 2017; this notwithstanding, women’s participation in the labor force remains
very low.
Severe inequalities of income, access to education and well-paying jobs continue in
the country despite recent minor improvements, and the gap between poorer and
wealthier segments of Turkish society has not been reduced.
Question
Score
Socioeconomic
barriers
5
BTI 2020 | Turkey
16
Economic indicators
2015
2016
2017
2018
859796.9
863721.6
851549.2
766509.1
GDP
$M
GDP growth
%
6.1
3.2
7.4
2.6
Inflation (CPI)
%
7.7
7.8
11.1
16.3
Unemployment
%
10.2
10.8
10.8
10.9
Foreign direct investment
% of GDP
2.2
1.6
1.4
1.7
Export growth
%
4.3
-1.9
11.9
7.5
Import growth
%
1.7
3.7
10.3
-7.9
Current account balance
$M
-32145.0
-33139.0
-47347.0
-27252.0
Public debt
% of GDP
27.6
28.3
28.2
30.2
External debt
$M
399948.9
409420.9
456174.1
445139.1
Total debt service
$M
55834.2
76094.9
86540.5
84161.7
Net lending/borrowing
% of GDP
0.5
-1.4
-2.4
-2.2
Tax revenue
% of GDP
18.2
18.3
17.9
18.0
Government consumption
% of GDP
13.9
14.8
14.5
14.4
Public education spending
% of GDP
-
-
-
-
Public health spending
% of GDP
3.2
3.4
-
-
R&D expenditure
% of GDP
0.9
0.9
1.0
-
Military expenditure
% of GDP
1.8
2.1
2.1
2.5
Sources (as of December 2019): The World Bank, World Development Indicators | International
Monetary Fund (IMF), World Economic Outlook | Stockholm International Peace Research Institute
(SIPRI), Military Expenditure Database.
BTI 2020 | Turkey
17
7 | Organization of the Market and Competition
Turkey’s economy is considered to be a functioning market economy, and in principle
the state fully guarantees and maintains market competition. However, in the
aftermath of the 2016 coup attempt and then again after the August 2018 currency
crisis, the state has tended to increasingly control the economic sphere through
actions targeting companies, businesspeople and political opponents. Several
companies have been transferred under the trusteeship of the Savings Deposit
Insurance Fund (Tasarruf Mevduatı Sigorta Fonu, TMSF).
In July 2018, President Erdoğan appointed his son-in-law, Berat Albayrak, as the
minister of finance and treasury, raising suspicion over executive control over the
economy in general. Consequently, the European Commission observed in its 2018
country report a “backsliding in Turkey’s commitment to market-oriented
approaches, with a deteriorating business environment and widening macroeconomic
imbalances.”
The state is still very active in price setting, especially in key sectors, a practice
mainly stemming from a politically driven desire to appeal to voters. Especially in
the food and energy sectors (natural gas and electricity), the government has
controlled the market and undermined automatic pricing mechanisms.
Although Turkey’s informal economy has decreased in size in recent years (from
32.2% of GDP in 2003, to 27.2% of GDP in 2014), as of 2018, unregistered work
still comprises 34.8% of the total work force. Turkey is ranked fourth among OECD
countries in terms of the size of its shadow economy.
The EU has requested that Turkey improve the transparency of state aid and align its
legislation on state aid schemes. However, this is yet to happen.
The procedures for starting a business have been simplified. The number of newly
created businesses decreased by 4.5% in 2016, but increased by 14.4% in 2017 and
this upward trend has continued in 2018. According to the World Bank’s 2019 Doing
Business report, it takes seven procedures, seven days and costs 10.6% of GNI per
capita to establish a business in Turkey, placing the country at a mediocre rank of 78
out of 190 in the sub-index “Starting a Business.” The conditions for market entry
remained costly and time-consuming in Turkey.
Market
organization
7
BTI 2020 | Turkey
Tied into the customs union with the EU since 1996, Turkey fulfilled its obligation
to adopt the EU’s antitrust legislation and established an independent body (Turkish
competition authority, TCA) with a mission to monitor the market and implement
antitrust rules where necessary. TCA operates effectively with regard to
privatizations, mergers, and acquisitions and has ensured that market positions are
not abused. For instance, TCA fined Google $17.38 million in September 2018 for
violating competition law in relation to the sales of its mobile software and launched
investigations into whether Google’s use of search engines and advertisements
violated competition law.
18
Competition policy
7
As noted by the European Commission in 2018, “state aid legislation, which was
supposed to come into effect in September 2011, has not been adopted. Instead, in
December 2017, the set of previously defined deadlines in the Law on Monitoring
and Supervision of the State Aid were repealed, empowering the Council of Ministers
to delay the enforcement of the law indefinitely. Turkey has therefore not yet aligned
its State Aid legislation and its enforcement with the related EU acquis.”
During the EU’s negotiations of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership
(TTIP) with the U.S., Turkey requested an updating of its customs union with the EU
and has repeated this request in context of the United Kingdom’s withdrawal from
the EU. Given the current political situation in Turkey, negotiations have stalled.
However, trade with the EU operates relatively unhindered, with the notable
exception of some specific goods, which are partly dealt with in the risk-based
electronic import control system “TAREKS.”
Liberalization of
foreign trade
8
Turkey has signed free trade agreements (FTA) with more than 25 countries, among
them Chile, Israel, Malaysia and South Korea. Turkey has been a member of the
World Trade Organization (WTO) since 1995. Its simple average MFN applied tariff
was 10.9% in 2017. Turkey is also a member of the Economic Cooperation
Organization (ECO), the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development
(UNCTAD), the Organization of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation (BSEC), the
World Customs Organization (WCO), and the International Chamber of Commerce
(ICC). The D-8 Organization for Economic Cooperation, headquartered in Istanbul,
was founded in 1997 at Turkey’s initiative.
Turkey’s banking system is organized according to European standards, with
functional supervision, minimum capital requirements and good market discipline.
According to the central bank of Turkey (CBT), all banks operate according to the
profit/loss-sharing principle. The banking regulation and supervision agency (BRSA)
further improved its supervisory and enforcement capacity and was accepted in 2009
as a member of the Basel committee on banking supervision and financial stability
board.
According to the BRSA, at the end of 2018 there were 52 banks operating in Turkey,
among them 34 deposit banks and 13 development and investment banks. Bank of
Banking system
9
BTI 2020 | Turkey
19
China Turkey began operations in December 2017. Banks have maintained an 82%
share of the financial sector’s total assets (December 2017). According to CBT data,
total foreign currency assets of Turkey’s banking sector were $289.8 billion in 2018,
a decrease of 1.6% compared to 2017. The non-banking sector’s total foreign
currency assets decreased by 0.2% to $181.8 billion in 2018.
The banking sector total foreign exchange liabilities were $327.0 billion in 2018, a
decrease of 7% from 2017. Non-bank foreign exchange liabilities were $215.5
billion, a decrease of 5.3% from 2017. The value of the banking sector’s assets as a
ratio of GDP fell from 121% in 2015 to 105% in 2016. The banks’ loans-to-deposits
ratio gradually increased over the same period, to 126% in 2017. The banking sector’s
capital adequacy ratio was 16.9% in 2017, an increase from 15.6% in 2016.
Basel II standards in capital adequacy calculations have been implemented since 2012
and the legislation necessary for the implementation of Basel III standards was passed
in late 2013. Turkey has continued to make amendments to a range of banking-related
regulations with a view to harmonizing domestic law with Basel III provisions.
According to the European Commission “the proportion of non-performing loans of
total banking sector loans slightly increased, from 3.1% in 2015 to 3.2% in 2016, but
declined in 2017 to 2.9% in December 2017.” The European Commission concluded
that since the “liquidity ratio of Turkish banks is below 100% for maturities between
7 days and 3 months and funded for half by derivatives,” Turkish banks may be
exposed to “counterparty risks, in particular in the case of exceptional events.”
However, despite the currency crisis in 2018, the Turkish banking system has so far
demonstrated resilience.
8 | Monetary and fiscal stability
While inflation in early 2016 stood at 7.6% – well above the central bank’s target of
5% – it increased to double-digit figures in 2017 and 2018 (11.1% and 16.4%
respectively). This was primarily driven by rises in food and energy prices, coupled
with the steady depreciation of the Turkish lira. International observers expect a
similar inflation rate in 2019, before a more moderate increase from 2020 onward.
CBT has adopted several policies to dampen inflation, ensure macro-financial
stability and control exchange rate fluctuation. The executive, especially President
Erdoğan and his son-in-law, minister of treasury and finance, Berat Albayrak, put
considerable pressure on the central bank to lower interest rates and increasingly
interfered in monetary policy. This interference marked a decrease in the central
bank’s transparency and predictability, as well as its credibility, by reducing its
operational and institutional independence.
In 2018, the Turkish lira depreciated by 24.5% against the dollar and reached an
historic low in August 2018. However, after a substantial recovery in September
Monetary stability
6
BTI 2020 | Turkey
20
2018, it has remained at a relatively stable level. Several factors contributed to this
recovery, including government’s attempts to lower the political tension between
Turkey and the U.S., (as a result of currency depreciation) a reduction in the currentaccount deficit, as well as measures taken by CBT in view of the upcoming local
elections in 2019. It remains to be seen whether the government measures will have
long-term consequences for the economy in terms of redressing structural
imbalances. The measures may otherwise have simply served to temporarily delay
the tackling of these problems until after local elections.
Following an average growth rate of 7.4% from 2010 to 2015, several factors,
including a turbulent domestic political climate, geopolitical conflicts, and security
concerns, slowed Turkey’s economy considerably in 2015. With a more favorable
international (especially European) economic context, coupled with a series of
government-led measures and incentives, Turkey’s economic growth accelerated
again in 2017 to 7.3% (from 3.3% in 2016). However, the European Commission’s
noted in its 2018 progress report that Turkey’s economy remained vulnerable, and
long-term growth (by addressing macroeconomic imbalances through the promotion
of domestic savings) and the improvement of the business environment (by
strengthening the rule of law and the judiciary) were key to enhancing economic
stability and resilience.
However, internal and external economic imbalances, especially the worsening
political context within Turkey (a rising trend of authoritarianism and the erosion of
the rule of law), but also political tensions with the U.S. and rising interest rates in
advanced economies, all led to a record depreciation of the Turkish lira in summer
2018 (the lira lost 40% of its value against the dollar). Following the currency crisis,
the Turkish economy stagnated in the second half of 2018. The 2018 annual growth
rate was 3.3%, and the OECD forecasts negative growth (-0.40%) for 2019.
Turkey’s current account deficit widened to 4.5% of GDP in 2017. It was 3.7% in
2016, and 7.7% in 2013. This trend continued in 2018. The budget balance remained
relatively stable (-2.45% of GDP in 2017, – 2.99% in 2016), after being recorded at
0.5% in 2015 (World Bank). Political turmoil after the attempted coup, combined
with international and bilateral crises (war in Syria and political tensions with the
U.S. and Russia) have negatively affected trade revenues, tourism and FDI. A high
current account deficit and large public debt have left the economy vulnerable to
sudden changes.
Inflation is high in Turkey and rose to 16.4% in 2018, up from 11.1% in 2017. The
current account balance stood at -$33,137 million in 2016 and fell to -$47,378 million
in 2017. Public debt was 27.9% of GDP in 2017. Total debt service in 2017 was
$75,952.6 million. In 2015, the figure was $21.873.7 million. Total external debt
increased to $405,656.1 million in 2016 (from $396,664.9 million in 2015). Total
Fiscal stability
7
BTI 2020 | Turkey
21
reserves have continued to fall from their all-time high of $110,926.7 million in 2013,
to $84,115.1 million in 2017.
9 | Private Property
Property rights and the regulation of the acquisition of private property are reasonably
well-defined under the Turkish legal system. According to the European
Commission, “Turkey has a good level of preparation in the legal protection of
intellectual property rights and of copyright and related rights.” Since 2017, Turkey
has made good progress in terms of legal alignment with the EU acquis, partly
achieved via a new industrial property law (2017). The legislation on the acquisition
of real estate by foreigners, however, does not fully comply with EU legislation.
Through a recent regulation, Turkey established new conditions for granting Turkish
citizenship to foreign investors subject to certain criteria including buying real estate.
Property rights
6
Under the state of emergency declared from July 2016 to July 2018, several
infringements to the right of private property occurred. State confiscation of property
belonging to institutions and companies went unchallenged and is a source of
concern. There were widespread expropriations from persons alleged to be adherents
of Fetullah Gülen, whom the government accused of masterminding the failed putsch.
In a March 2018 report, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
highlighted the consequences of the arbitrary expropriation of private property for
human rights. On the grounds that these confiscations are politically motivated and
unlawful, Turkey is subject to several ongoing international legal proceedings.
Following the end of the peace process with the Kurdish PKK, thousands of Kurds
were expelled from their homes and a large proportion of their property was
expropriated, especially in Diyarbakır and Sur district. Appeals against
expropriations were rejected in court.
Private companies continue to comprise the most important component of the Turkish
economy. Starting a business in Turkey has been made easier through recent
legislation. According to the World Bank Report on Doing Business 2019, Turkey
has taken steps to substantially ease the launching of a business, and now ranks
among the 10 top improvers globally (January 2019). Several reforms involved
institutional changes. The government’s reform efforts focused on improving the
digitalization and electronic processing of documents. Starting a company now takes
less time and has become easier.
Despite these positive trends, the overall business environment in Turkey has been
negatively affected by the state of emergency and the erosion of the rule of law. Since
July 2016, Turkey’s economy continued to be characterized by a high level of
arbitrary rule. Pre-2016, private companies were granted broad legal and institutional
safeguards. However, politically motivated expropriations of firms and businesses
belonging to alleged supporters of the coup attempt has cast a shadow over the
business climate. According to a European Commission progress report (2018), “the
Private enterprise
7
BTI 2020 | Turkey
22
tendency to increase state control in the economic sphere and the actions targeting
companies, businessmen and political opponents and their businesses harmed the
business environment.”
10 | Welfare Regime
The social security institution (sosyal güvenlik kurumu), established in 2006, offers
short-term and long-term benefits such as support in case of workplace injuries,
illness and maternity leave, old age insurance, disability insurance, survivors’
insurance, and marriage and funeral benefits. The health care system in general
functions well, providing largely accessible and almost universal coverage; yet
differences exist between different regions of the country.
Social safety nets
7
The country lacks a long-term care system that covers children and people with
disabilities. The welfare system is also beset by heavy debt, which the government
has attempted to reduce through various reforms. In 2016, social protection
expenditure represented 12.8% of GDP. Half of this amount is spent on old age
pensions. The state covers general health insurance premiums for around 8.7 million
people in need.
Turkish labor law has yet to be aligned with EU standards. In a 2018 report, the
European Commission noted a backsliding on workers’ rights, manifested in mass
dismissals and suspensions in the public sector. Furthermore, a high percentage of
the working population is not protected by the labor law, in particular domestic maids,
agricultural workers, and those working for forestry companies with fewer than 50
employees. There are high numbers of people in unregistered work in Turkey, which
seriously weakens the sustainability of the social security system and is a source of
concern.
According to the Turkish statistical institute, the ratio of persons working without any
social security relating to their main job was 32.4%, marking a 0.7% decrease
compared with the previous year’s figure. In the non-agricultural sector, the rate of
unregistered employment was 21.9%, a 0.1% decrease from the previous year’s
figure. Subcontracted workers frequently experience poor working conditions,
unjustified dismissals and face difficulties in joining trade unions. Health and safety
regulations are often poorly implemented.
Turkey has a legislative and institutional framework on gender equality, attributable
to the country’s accession process to the EU. However, conservative rhetoric and
government policies which emphasize motherhood instead of gender equality has led
to the deterioration of women’s status and to widespread discrimination against
women. There is a lack of strong political commitment to gender equality.
Government policies that have incentivized marriages, childbirth and women’s parttime work have been counterproductive to women’s empowerment. In terms of
employment, there is a large difference between men (75.5%) and women (33.2%).
Equal opportunity
6
BTI 2020 | Turkey
23
A gender pay gap is observed at all levels of educational attainment. The lack of
daycare services for pre-school children and adequate institutional framework for
providing care to sick and elderly people prevent women’s participation in the
workforce. Turkey is an increasingly conservative society and women’s role is
increasingly defined in relation to the family. There is a need for improvement
concerning school enrollment for girls, especially in secondary education. Early and
forced marriage for women continues to be a major concern. A recent government
decision to grant the authority to conduct civil marriages to provincial and district
muftis risks augmenting the number of early and forced marriages.
Progress has been made in combating discrimination on the basis of racial or ethnic
origin, religion or belief, disability, age, and sexual orientation. However, there is still
ample room for improvement. Although written anti-discrimination regulations do
exist, members of religious and ethnic minorities continue to be excluded from
positions in the civil service and army. The Kurds especially, are discriminated in
socioeconomic terms, and have less access to education and the labor market.
11 | Economic Performance
Turkey’s economy underwent substantial fluctuations over the review period. In 2015
annual real GDP growth was 6.1%. This fell to 3.18% in 2016 (mainly due to
domestic turmoil), before increasing to 7.4% in 2017. However, 2018 saw a
substantial fall to 2.6%, its lowest level for several years. Total GDP fell from
$863,721.6 million in 2016 to $851,102.4 million in 2017. GDP per capita (PPP)
increased moderately from $25,247 in 2016 to $26,505 in 2017.
The domestic political turbulence coupled with bilateral tensions with the U.S. and
rising interest rates in advanced economies contributed to a record devaluation of the
Turkish lira in the first half of 2018. This led to higher import costs and accelerated
consumer price inflation (16.4% in 2018, up from 11.1% in 2017). Turkey’s total
exports in 2017 were $156.9 million. Imports were $233.8 million, leading to a
negative trade balance of -$76.8 million. The issues described above also affected
FDI. Net FDI inflows to Turkey declined sharply by 30.5% to approximately 1.5%
of GDP in 2016, from 2.1% in 2015. It declined further to 1.3% in 2017. According
to a European Commission report in 2018, Turkey’s dependence on capital inflows
makes its currency and the economy “volatile to a sudden loss of investors’
confidence.”
Public debt/GDP has fallen consistently since 2009. In 2009, it stood at 43.9%, but
fell to 27.9% in 2017.
The current account deficit was narrowing until 2016, when it rose sharply to $33,137 million and -$47,378 million in 2017. Despite government measures such as
increased taxes, higher spending on defense, mega infrastructure investments, public
Output strength
6
BTI 2020 | Turkey
24
employment and social benefits are forecasted to further increase the budget deficit
in 2018 (to an estimated 1.9% of GDP, from 1.5% in 2017 according to the EIU 2019
Turkey Report).
Turkey’s earlier rapid economic growth was due to the favorable international
financial context for developing countries. The prospect of becoming a member state
of the EU formed the main anchor for the Turkish economy. However, as EU
membership appears no longer a viable option for Turkey, and the low level of
confidence of international investors in the Turkish political and economic system, it
remains to be seen how quickly Turkey’s economy will recover from the economic
turmoil that followed the August 2018 currency crisis.
12 | Sustainability
Although Turkey has some environmental policies, the country needs to make
progress in several areas, especially waste management and industrial pollution. Air
pollution is a serious problem in Turkey. The country has relied heavily on fossil
fuels, particularly coal, to meet its increasing energy demands. Its CO2 emissions
increased by 135.4% between 1990 and 2016. In the area of water quality, despite
some moderate alignment with the EU acquis, no substantial progress has been made.
The EU has urged Turkey to adopt the “framework legislation on nature protection
and the national biodiversity strategy and action plan.” In 2017, Turkey adopted the
implementing legislation on the registration, evaluation, authorization and restriction
of chemicals (REACH).
While Turkey signed the Paris Agreement on Climate Change in 2016, the country
has taken no further steps to ratify the agreement. Turkey lacks a consistent national
climate change strategy and action plan for its energy sector. Several large
infrastructure projects, such as micro hydropower plants and the third Bosphorus
bridge, were deliberately excluded from national environmental impact assessment
procedures. The government generally prioritizes economic development over
environmental protection. Taking advantage of the state of emergency declared after
the July 2016 coup attempt, the government passed a law in August 2016 allowing
the fast-tracking of large infrastructure projects, mostly in the energy sector. The new
mega airport north of Istanbul is an illustration of the government’s complete
disregard of environmental concerns: over 2.5 million trees were destroyed during its
construction.
Environmental
policy
4
BTI 2020 | Turkey
The quality of education in Turkey is inadequate. Turkey ranks at the bottom of the
table in the latest PISA rankings. Despite some improvements in PISA maths and
science assessments in the latest PISA rankings, Turkey’s achievements remain well
below the OECD average. According to the OECD, “Turkey has a higher-thanaverage proportion of underperforming students,” especially among students from
lower socioeconomic backgrounds.
Turkey spends less per student on primary to tertiary educational institutions than any
other OECD country: $4,652 per student, which is less than half the OECD average
of $10,391. Secondary education institutions are particularly underfunded, receiving
$3,511 per student, approximately one-third of the OECD average ($9,868).
Participation rates in early childhood education and care are low compared to the
OECD average (52% for pre-school education). In the academic year 2016/17, the
enrollment rate was 91% for primary, 96% for lower secondary and 83% for upper
secondary education, according to a European Commission progress report (2018).
Students leaving school early (34%) is a major concern.
Turkey has improved to 1.0 on the gender parity index in recent years. However,
gender differences in literacy remain a challenge: in 2016, the World Bank reported
an overall adult literacy rate of 96.167%, with men (98.776%) outperforming women
(93.563%).
Turkey has 180 universities, but there is a profound disparity in the quality of
education offered by them.
Regarding research and innovation policy, a 2018 report by the European
Commission noted that “Turkey’s overall research capacity is still limited in terms of
the number of researchers (reaching only one-third of the European average)” and
that “the proportion of overall GDP provided by R&D expenditure remained only at
1%.”
In 2014, Turkey joined the EU’s Erasmus Programme. Turkey is also involved in the
EU’s Horizon 2020 program, but participation by Turkish researchers needs to be
improved. As noted by the European Commission, “Turkey is still below the EU
average in almost all indicators of the European Innovation scoreboard.”
After the coup attempt of July 2016, thousands of educators from schools and
universities were dismissed. Some schools and universities were closed altogether.
These dismissals and closures will have long-term negative impacts on Turkey’s
education system. Furthermore, under the state of emergency, several academics,
researchers and PhD students have left the country. Although the government
recently enacted several incentives to stop the brain drain, some 113,000 Turks
emigrated in 2018, according to the Turkish institute of statistics, a sharp increase
over the previous year (when more than 69,000 left the country). This number
includes students, academics, businesspeople and well-educated upper middle-class
citizens. The flight of educated and talented people is expected to negatively affect
Turkish education system in the medium- to long-term.
25
Education policy /
R&D
5
BTI 2020 | Turkey
26
Governance
I. Level of Difficulty
Turkey’s government faces several external constraints. However, it is also partly
responsible for some of them. Turkey’s geographic location in the conflict-ridden
Middle East, adjacent to two unstable neighbors (Syria and Iraq), not only represents
a danger to Turkish security, but also poses humanitarian challenges. Turkey is now
home to approximately 4 million Syrian refugees (as of 2018). Turkey is also prone
to earthquakes and insufficient rainfall. Tourism, important to Turkey’s economy, is
nevertheless a highly volatile source of income.
Structural
constraints
5
Turkey’s particular strengths, namely its population size and relatively young and
well-educated labor force, may become a weakness if the looming youth
unemployment is left unaddressed, especially in the context of the economic
stagnation Turkey has experienced since mid-2018. Turkey’s politically induced
brain drain also poses a great challenge for the future.
There are difficulties in reconciling elements of traditional and modern Turkish
society. Especially in recent years, rising societal polarization between secularists and
conservatives, as well as fault lines between Sunni Turks and ethnic/religious
minorities, both represent a challenge for governance. Further challenges are regional
disparities between west and east Turkey, with deficient infrastructure found
predominantly in southeastern and eastern Anatolia.
Deficiencies exist in Turkey’s administrative and legal systems. The government’s
extensive purge of (real and perceived) opponents within the judiciary, military and
administration, and subsequent politicized appointments by the executive is a source
of concern for the state’s future competences.
Turkey has a moderately well-developed tradition of civil society. While civil society
institutions have existed in the past, they were always controlled by the state. They
have served most often to facilitate administration in remote areas where the state
was weak and have also formed important elements of the urban administration. The
attitude of the state and its institutions to civil society is ambiguous. When civil
society organizations are regarded as beneficial, they enjoy considerable attention
from the state and are consulted frequently. However, institutions considered to be
critical of the state or government policies are regarded as a threat, and frequently
face serious legal and financial obstruction.
Civil society
traditions
6
BTI 2020 | Turkey
27
Turkey’s authoritarian turn in recent years has precipitated a serious backsliding on
civil society issues. Under the state of emergency, mass arrests of activists, including
prominent civil society representatives, and the recurrent use of bans on
demonstrations put enormous pressure on civil society. Many rights-based
organizations were closed by the government under the state of emergency.
Despite these repressive measures, civil society has demonstrated resilience.
However, as noted by the European Commission in a 2018 report, “the map of civil
society organizations has started to change significantly, with a more visible role
given to the pro-government organizations.” Furthermore, administrative burdens
limit civil society activities. An increasingly repressive political environment and the
erosion of fundamental freedoms have further restricted the development of a genuine
civil society.
Turkish society is deeply divided along ethnic (Kurds vs. Turks), political
(conservative nationalists vs. modernists) and religious (Sunni Islamists vs.
secularists) fault lines. In the conflict based on the Kurdish-Turkish axis, a renewed
full-scale, violent confrontation erupted in July 2015. South-eastern Turkey has seen
numerous clashes between Turkish security forces and the PKK. The leaders and
members of the pro-Kurdish HDP party have experienced harassment and arrests.
Secular segments of Turkish society remain concerned over the constant undermining
and weakening of democratic institutions and civil liberties, and a parallel
Islamization of Turkey under AKP rule. AKP’s increasingly authoritarian policies
attest to a political climate marked by high tension and antagonism, aggravated by
heavy-handed policies that followed the failed coup and the introduction of the new
presidential system based on a majoritarian understanding of democracy. The flow of
capital and wealth to AKP’s voters is an additional source of concern for anti-AKP
groups.
The dimensions of polarization in Turkey surveys conducted by Istanbul Bilgi
University (in 2015 and 2017) identified a number of causes of conflict in Turkish
society. These include historical cleavages between the center and the periphery, the
secular and the religious, Kurdish and Turkish, and an intensification of these by
divisive rhetoric from populist leaders and a lack of intraparty democracy and
diversity of opinion.
Conflict intensity
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28
II. Governance Performance
14 | Steering Capability
The high frequency of critical elections in recent years (local and presidential
elections in 2014, general elections in June and November 2015, constitutional
referendum in 2017, parliamentary and presidential elections in 2018, upcoming local
elections in 2019) has meant short-term electoral promises trump long-term political
planning. In its rhetoric, the government insists that it remains committed to
democracy and to the ideal of EU membership, but recent actions strongly contradict
these claims.
Question
Score
Prioritization
4
The change in the government’s approach first became obvious in the harsh reaction
to the 2013 Gezi Park protests, and then again after the 2016 coup attempt. Domestic
reforms, enacted to a large extent in response to the EU’s political conditions during
the accession process, have been completely abandoned. With the rising tide of
nationalism, the executive has overtly confronted the EU. While mass arrests and
infringements on fundamental rights under the state of emergency (2016 - 2018) were
a serious blow to Turkish democracy, the transition to the presidential system has
accelerated Turkey’s authoritarian turn.
The country’s economic success has been the government’s strongest argument for
support and for its actions in silencing opponents. However, since the 2013 corruption
allegations involving several ministers and family members of Recep Tayyip
Erdoğan, the government and the president have adopted a more nationalistic
rhetoric, putting the accent on Turkey’s external and internal enemies. The main
argument in this rhetoric is the need for strong leadership to defend Turkey from
foreign enemies and their domestic collaborators.
In recent years, Turkey’s strategic priorities have been heavily affected by the
external context. Syrian civil war, tension with Russia and the U.S., and economic
dependency on FDI limit the government’s capacity to set strategic priorities and
maintain them over extended periods of time.
The government’s main priority is to preserve its electoral base, despite domestic
turmoil, economic stagnation and corruption probes. AKP’s former reform agenda,
mainly driven by its strategic priority of joining the EU, has been replaced by shortterm priorities dictated by electoral concerns. Partly attributable to the lack of
commitment from the EU, reforms related to the accession process first stagnated
between 2011 and 2014 and were then started to reverse since 2015. Turkey-EU
relations have soured. This was originally due to the divergent attitudes toward
Implementation
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29
Cyprus. However, complying with EU criteria has also become politically costly for
an increasingly authoritarian government: under the new presidential system, an
excessively powerful president has almost unlimited authority to achieve its
priorities, taking Turkey further away from its previous aspiration to join the EU and
the accompanying reform agenda.
The government has remained successful in inaugurating large infrastructural
projects, such as the (partial) opening of Istanbul’s new mega airport in 2018, and the
further extension of high-speed rail lines.
In the past, Turkish decision-makers have shown considerable readiness to learn. This
learning influenced leading Turkish politicians’ plans for the future of the country, as
well as the AKP’s manifestos in general and local elections. However, Turkey’s
transition to its new presidential system marks a new era in its politics. The new
system revolves around a president who holds almost absolute decision-making
power in domestic as well as foreign politics. While the system is presented by the
government as a new and more effective governance model, the “à la Turca”
presidential system represents all the features of an arbitrary and old-fashioned
authoritarian system, leaving little room for alternative views or criticisms. In the
absence of a critical media, pluralistic civil society and vivid opposition, there is no
independent source of effective monitoring or evaluation of the executive.
Policy learning
5
15 | Resource Efficiency
The allocation of resources and their efficient use remains one of the fundamental
shortcomings of the public sector in Turkey. People employed in the public sector (as
a share of total employment) increased marginally from 13.5% in 2015 to 13.8% in
2016. According to a 2018 European Commission progress report on Turkey,
women’s participation in public service – approximately 37% – must be improved.
The employment rate of staff with disabilities has not yet met the official target of
3%.
Many employees have insufficient qualifications and capabilities for their jobs. It is
generally believed that political considerations, rather than merit, are responsible for
securing employment as well as promotion in the public sector. While there are some
attempts or discussions on modernizing the administrative capacity of the state, no
comprehensive reform or decentralization has been planned.
In the aftermath of the July 2016 failed coup, tens of thousands of public employees
were dismissed from their positions, charged with being behind the coup attempt
against the government. As of early 2019, 150,348 state officials, including teachers,
bureaucrats and academics, had been dismissed. According to the European
Commission, the impact on Turkey’s institutional capacity has been significant in
some critical public institutions, including the judiciary, the security forces and key
Efficient use of
assets
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30
regulatory bodies in the areas of public finance, energy, banking and capital markets.
Many of these dismissed employees have been replaced with staff seen as more loyal
to the government, irrespective of their qualifications.
The government clampdown has also led to the emigration of hundreds of
intellectuals as well as the dismissal of vast numbers of teaching personnel from
institutions of higher education. Both constitute a brain drain from the country and
thus the loss of important assets.
The successive electoral victories of the AKP since 2002 attest to the strength of the
ruling elite. Depending on the circumstances, AKP has successfully formed flexible
coalitions (with Fetullah Gülen, Kurds or, since 2015, the nationalist extreme right
MHP) and eliminated political rivals and opponents. Former top governmental
representatives with opposing viewpoints have apparently been successfully silenced,
including former president, Abdullah Gül, and former foreign minister, prime
minister, and AKP chairman, Ahmet Davutoğlu.
Policy
coordination
6
With the concentration of power in the presidency, decision-making on a range of
matters takes place in the presidential palace. These decisions cover every sphere of
domestic politics, including economic management and foreign policy. For its
supporters, this excessive concentration of power is beneficial for fast and efficient
decision-making as well as better policy coordination. In the run-up to the 2018
presidential elections, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and prominent figures from AKP
defended the new system as a necessary instrument for dealing with several complex
security challenges (such as terrorism, the civil war in Syria, and coup plotters). On
the other hand, opponents of the presidential system point to the deficiencies of the
system, and the acceleration of Turkey’s autocratization.
Corruption remains a widespread structural problem in Turkey. Although during its
early years in power the AKP prioritized anti-corruption efforts and adopted a series
of measures to eradicate the problem, there has been little tangible progress to date.
The corruption allegations involving several members of Erdoğan’s family and
cabinet in 2013, and subsequent harsh measures to persecute investigators, dealt a
serious blow to Turkey’s anti-corruption efforts. Subsequent measures to curb the
independence of the judiciary raised suspicion over the government’s true
commitment to a genuine anti-corruption agenda.
One fundamental problem is the lack of an independent anti-corruption body. There
is also no inter-institutional coordination for preventing or combating corruption.
According to the European Commission, Turkey has failed to implement the majority
of measures envisaged in the transparency and anti-corruption action plan announced
in 2016. Turkey has also failed to implement the United Nations’ anti-corruption
convention.
Anti-corruption
policy
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31
Although there was some progress in the implementation of the recommendations
made by the Council of Europe’s group of states against corruption (GRECO),
Turkey has failed to implement the majority of GRECO’s recommendations on
preventing corruption among parliamentarians, judges and prosecutors. The
centralization of the administration into the hands of the president has created a
system in which there is less transparency in the overall management of state affairs,
and an absence of a healthy system of checks and balances over the executive. This
latter situation was compounded by the abolishment of parliament’s right to
interpellation and its auditing power over the president.
16 | Consensus-Building
Formally, all major actors in Turkey agree on the desirability of democracy.
However, there are different conceptualizations of democracy among different
segments of society as well as among political parties. While the government and the
ultra-nationalist MHP (since 2016, AKP’s close ally) advocate a majoritarian
understanding of democracy, the opposition subscribes to a more pluralistic version.
These contested and contrasted understandings of democracy became very
pronounced in the run-up to the referendum on the constitutional amendments in
April 2017, as well as during the campaign for the presidency in 2018. While the
AKP-led bloc campaigned for a strong executive representing the will of the majority,
the opposition – although divided between several parties – opposed the new
presidential system on the grounds that it would lead to a dictatorship at the expense
of the parliamentary system. Although the referendum was approved by 52.59%,
President Erdoğan’s legitimacy is questioned by his opponents.
The government’s abandonment of democratic principles is also visible in its
approach toward the Kurdish minority: the reconciliation process has been replaced
by armed conflict and violence.
There is consensus on the desirability of a market economy. However, considerable
conflict exists over the details of economic organization. Privatizations and neoliberal
labor laws have meant that Turkey’s economic boom has come at a considerable
social cost. A significant proportion of the Turkish labor force still works for
relatively low wages and remains unable to partake in the advantages brought about
by economic growth.
Consensus on goals
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32
After the military was brought under firm civilian control following the coup attempt
in 2016, there is no longer any anti-democratic veto power. However, during the
period under review, Turkey’s divergence from parliamentary democracy, and its
transition to the presidential system, accelerated the country’s autocratization
process. It appears that remaining liberal-democratic actors and reformers in Turkey
lack sufficient power to reverse the current autocratization of Turkey, which is led by
a democratically elected president.
Anti-democratic
actors
The government has failed to serve as an effective mediator in a number of recent
conflicts. Worse still, the government has become party to ethnic, religious and
ideological conflicts and has exacerbated them. This was particularly observable
during the 2013 Gezi Park protests in Istanbul. The country’s political climate has
become highly antagonistic since then, with supporters of the government pitted
against defenders of the “old” Kemalist system, and groups advocating an expansion
of democracy and civil liberties. Since the 2013 Gezi Park protests, the government
has pursued a successful securitization policy and labeled any form of opposition an
attempt to destroy Turkish Republic’s achievements.
Cleavage /
conflict
management
The coup attempt of July 2016 provoked new conflicts. The government initiated an
extensive purge against partisans of the Fetullah Gülen movement. Consequently, it
suspended, removed, dismissed and even imprisoned numerous followers, all on
charges that they were conspiring to topple the government.
The transition to the presidential system constituted another divisive issue in the
society.
Despite President Erdoğan’s promises to embrace all segments of society in his
immediate post-election speeches, during the review period he adopted an extremely
divisive rhetoric. His discourses frequently presented the opposition and dissident
groups or individuals as antagonists in a battle between “us” (the democratically
elected government and those who vote AKP) and “them” (those who attempt to
damage Turkish economy, its international image and democracy).
In addition, the peace process with the Kurdish minority (which had seen tangible
progress) has been abandoned. Since 2015, the south-east of the country has
experienced numerous clashes between Turkish security forces and PKK.
Furthermore, Turkey has conducted several cross-border operations in Syria to
contain the activities of the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (Yekîneyên Parastina
Gel, YPG), which is perceived by the Turkish government as a sister terrorist
organization of PKK. These activities have aggravated tensions between Turks and
Kurds in Turkey.
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BTI 2020 | Turkey
During the two-year state of emergency following the failed coup attempt of July
2016, civil society faced serious challenges. The fate of civil society institutions,
particularly professional and economic interest associations, often depend on whether
they are considered by the government to be useful. Legislation affecting civil society
became increasingly restrictive in recent years, reducing civil society’s capacity to
hold an increasingly authoritarian government to account.
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Civil society
participation
2
The government’s large-scale purges have also targeted important civil society
institutions. Many NGOs have been shut down completely, charged with endangering
national security. While pro-government NGOs have become more visible and have
started to assume a greater role in society, those that remain critical of the government
- especially human rights organizations and pro-democracy NGOs - face systematic
intimidation, closure and arrest of their members. A case in point is Osman Kavala,
chairman of the Anadolu Kültür Foundation, who was arrested in October 2017 on
charges of having contacts to the Gülen movement and for being responsible for the
organization of the Gezi Park protests in 2013.
There has been little practical progress in resolving two long-standing conflicts. The
AKP government has been unable to deal satisfactorily with the issue of the massacre
committed against the Armenians during World War I, although – due to changes in
public opinion and frequent calls for the issue to be directly addressed – it has
displayed greater openness than its predecessors. However, the 2009 protocols on the
normalization of relations with Armenia were not ratified and were renounced by
Armenia in February 2018. Although there some progress has been made, Turkish
nationalists are still reluctant to use the word “genocide,” and to admit guilt or
responsibility.
As noted by an EU report on Turkey, in February 2018 the court of cassation accepted
the case filed by the Armenian patriarchate regarding the restitution of the Sanasaryan
Han, an education center which was seized by the state. With this decision, the legal
personality of the patriarchate of the Armenians of Turkey has been de jure
recognized for the first time. However, given the rising nationalist tide in Turkey and
AKP’s close collaboration with ultra-nationalist MHP, any significant progress in this
area is highly unlikely.
Little progress has been made in settling the conflict with the Kurds both within and
outside Turkey. In 2009, as then prime minister, Erdoğan embarked upon a new
initiative to reach a settlement. Few tangible acts have followed this announcement,
though the Turkish government has been more open to the use of the Kurdish
language in education, broadcast and publishing. The end of the peace process in
2015 triggered a new period of confrontation between Turkish armed forces and PKK
militia. Turkey’s cross border operations in Syria, especially the threat it perceives
from PYD/YPG forces has negatively affected the prospect of any reconciliation in
the medium term.
Reconciliation
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BTI 2020 | Turkey
34
To a minor extent challenges for the non-Muslim and non-Sunni Muslim
communities within Turkey continue. Even though the Turkish constitution accords
all Turkish citizens equal rights and duties, members of these minorities continue to
face considerable discrimination. The Gülen movement was declared a terrorist
organization in December 2015 and its adherents have faced the brunt of government
repression. The government has shown little inclination to reconcile with its
opponents since the failed coup attempt of July 2016. Rather, it has responded with
excessive severity.
17 | International Cooperation
Turkey pursues a multilateral and multidimensional foreign diplomacy and actively
cooperates with key international and regional organizations. It is a member of the
United Nations, the Council of Europe, North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO),
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), World Trade Organization (WTO),
Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC), Black Sea Economic Cooperation
(BSEC), Economic Cooperation Organization (ECO), the G20 and the Developing-8
Organization for Economic (D-8).
Turkey has developed an extensive network of international cooperation. It has high
level cooperation councils with 25 countries, as well as 20 free trade agreements.
Turkey has deepened its African partnership policy as well as actively collaborated
with several regions, including Latin America, the Caribbean and Asia-Pacific.
Through this web of relations, Turkey aspires to bolster its security and economic
development.
Relations with the EU, however, have cooled, especially over divergent assessments
of the purge that followed the 2016 attempted coup. As of January 2019, while
Turkey’s accession to the EU seems unlikely, the EU and Turkey continue their
dialog and cooperation in areas of joint interest, including energy, transport and
economy and trade, counter-terrorism and refugees, supported by high-level
discussions. In March 2016, Erdoğan agreed to the EU-Turkey statement on
migration, which would grant Turkey €6 billion in return for improved cooperation
over migration. During the review period there were a number of high-level visits
between the EU and Turkey. However, Erdoğan seriously provoked Western
governments with repeated accusations of “Nazi methods” in response to criticism of
his increasingly authoritarian rule.
Effective use of
support
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BTI 2020 | Turkey
The Turkish government’s image has been severely tarnished during the review
period. The authoritarian policies pursued by the government since the failed coup of
July 2016, the establishment of a new presidential system with an excessively
powerful president and the rapprochement with Russia have given rise to grave
concerns in the transatlantic hemisphere as to whether Turkey can still be considered
a reliable partner.
Bilateral relations with several individual EU member states, including with Austria,
Germany and the Netherlands are tense, and there have been diplomatic incidents
including the use of offensive rhetoric by both sides. In early 2018, Turkey engaged
at the highest level in diplomatic efforts to normalize its strained relations with EU
capitals, notably through presidential and ministerial visits. However, relations
remain strained. Turkey’s authoritarian turn, and its efforts to eradicate the network
of Gülen (which the government considers a terror organization), have channeled the
country’s domestic troubles into its foreign relations, and consequently raised
suspicions about Turkey’s reliability in Western capitals. These tensions have begun
to undermine military cooperation with some NATO allies. The continued detention
of the American pastor Andrew Brunson by Turkey, charged with espionage and links
to the Gülen movement and the PKK, heightened tension between Turkey and the
U.S. over the course of 2018.
A series of incidents, including the imposition of sanctions by the U.S. on two Turkish
ministers in August 2018, further deteriorated already very tense relations between
the two countries. Turkey, in an attempt to normalize relations with the U.S., released
Brunson in 2018. Despite Turkey’s politically motivated gesture, relations with the
U.S. remain at their lowest level.
Rapprochement with Russia has not been straightforward. After Turkey shot down a
Russian military aircraft that had entered its airspace from Syria, relations rapidly
deteriorated. However, they relations recovered rapidly. An example of this is the
agreement signed between Turkey and Russia in December 2018 for Turkey to
purchase from Russia S-400 surface-to-air missile batteries. This move caused
serious concern among NATO allies, because the purchases cannot be integrated into
NATO’s military architecture.
The deteriorating security situation in the country in recent years has damaged the
image of the country among both businessmen and tourists. In conclusion, the
behavior of the Turkish government has become erratic and unpredictable in many
policy areas, leading to a lack of credibility and loss of prestige in the international
realm.
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Credibility
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BTI 2020 | Turkey
Turkey’s transition to a new presidential regime has implications for its foreign
policy. With the concentration of power in the president’s office, the conduct of
foreign policy has started to become more politicized and dictated by short-term
interests at the expense of long-term strategies drawing on the extensive experience
and diplomatic tradition of the ministry of foreign affairs. Foreign policy priorities of
the new regime seem to be strictly embedded in the ideological vision of the political
elite. This vision revolves around the idea of diversifying Turkey’s foreign policy
options, thus loosening its previously clear Western orientation. This ideological
approach to foreign policy has led the AKP to play a greater role in the Middle East
under Ahmet Davutoğlu (foreign minister until 2014), and Turkey began to extend
its economic ties beyond the Balkans, Middle East, Caucasus and Central Asia.
However, Davutoğlu’s “zero problems” foreign policy strategy proved to be
unsuccessful, partially due to developments in the region following the Arab Spring.
As a Sunni Muslim power, Turkey tried to support the construction of a “Sunni
alliance” involving Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and a Sunni-dominated future Syrian
government. This increased political tension with the so-called “Shi’i axis” of Iran,
Syria’s President Bashir al-Assad and the Lebanese Hezbollah. Yet the active
involvement of both Iran and Russia in the Syrian civil war in support of Assad, and
the disengagement of the U.S. from Syria led Turkey to revise its policy vis-à-vis that
conflict.
Since then, the Turkish government has started to cooperate with Russia and Iran to
stabilize the war in Syria through the Astana process. Turkey sent troops to Syria in
August 2016 (Operation Euphrates Shield) and did not hide its intentions to not only
fight Islamic State, but also the Syrian-Kurdish U.S.-backed YPG, primarily through
operation “Olive Branch” in January 2018. Meanwhile, Turkey has continued to
cooperate with the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in Northern Iraq, partly
out of an interest in maintaining a certain degree of control over any attempts to
establish an independent Kurdish state.
Turkey has a long-standing conflict with Armenia over Turkish involvement in the
Armenian genocide during World War I. Turkey has consistently supported Turkic
and Muslim Azerbaijan in its struggle with Armenia over the control of the NagornoKarabakh enclave. The Turkish-Armenian border has been closed for many years.
The 2009 protocols on normalization of relations with Armenia were not ratified and
were renounced by Armenia in February 2018.
Relations with Greece also remain tense. Among several bilateral issues, the
delimitation of the continental shelf keeps poisoning bilateral relations between the
two countries. The threat of a casus belli in relation to the possible extension of Greek
territorial waters, as accepted by the Turkish Grand National Assembly in 1995, is
still present. Although during President Erdoğan’s visit to Greece in December 2017
– the first visit by a Turkish president in 65 years – the two countries’ leaders
committed to ease tensions in the Aegean Sea, in 2018 a series of incidents took place,
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Regional
cooperation
5
BTI 2020 | Turkey
including the collision of a Hellenic coast guard vessel with a Turkish patrol boat off
the islets of Imia and the detention of two Greek soldiers. As noted by the European
Commission progress reports on Turkey, “Greece and Cyprus reported repeated and
increased violations of their territorial waters and airspace by Turkey, including
flights over Greek islands.” The Cyprus issue continues to poison relations between
Greece and Turkey. Nevertheless, the two countries have been able to cooperate over
migration.
Concerning the settlement of the Cyprus issue, Turkey continues to support the talks
between the leaders of the two communities, and the efforts of the U.N. SecretaryGeneral and special adviser. During the review period, a conference on Cyprus was
convened in Geneva in January 2017 and in Crans-Montana in July 2017. No
agreement was reached. Turkey continues to question and challenge the right of the
Republic of Cyprus to exploit hydrocarbon resources in the Cyprus exclusive
economic zone. Turkish naval forces went so far as to intervene against an Italian
drilling ship commissioned by Cyprus in February 2018. Turkey, the only country to
recognize the “Turkish Republic of North Cyprus,” claims to be entitled to conduct
its own exploration, in the face of protests from the Cypriot government.
In conclusion, a key change in Turkish foreign and regional policy during the review
period has been the impact of the new concentrated powers assumed by President
Erdoğan, who increasingly draws power from the rising nationalist tide in the
country. Turkish foreign policy has become less predictable and may become more
likely to use military force in the future.
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BTI 2020 | Turkey
Strategic Outlook
Following the victory of Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in snap presidential elections in June 2018, a new
era has begun in Turkish politics. The parliamentary system has been replaced by a new
presidential system characterized by an excessively powerful president. This de facto dictatorship
has implications for Turkish democracy and foreign policy. First, the new regime has accelerated
Turkey’s authoritarian drift. Fundamental freedoms, rule of law and civil liberties have now been
eroded, and Turkey can no longer be classified as a democracy. Shrinking space for dissident
voices, and increasingly repressive government policies have led to a deeper polarization of
Turkish society, which was already divided along ethnic, religious and ideological lines. The
political climate today is marked by various antagonisms. In the past, political tensions were
primarily evident between supporters of the AKP government on the one hand and partisans of the
“old” Kemalist system and elites on the other. By contrast, the main fault line today may be drawn
between AKP supporters, who regard President Erdoğan as the strong leader Turkey needs, and
those groups who remain advocates of greater liberalism, civil rights and social justice. In addition
to this major fault line, there are tensions between Kurds and Turks, and Sunni Turks and religious
minorities. The lack of communication between these groups, coupled with the absence of
appropriate channels for the representation of opposing views (such as free media or a vibrant civil
society) may pose a serious challenge in terms of governance in the medium to long-term.
Therefore, the government must develop policies to ease the tension between different groups,
take steps to develop a pluralistic society, and introduce a consensus culture in Turkish society.
The new regional dynamics with the Syrian conflict and the emergence of Rojava completely
transformed the outlook of the Kurdish political movement in Turkey. They led the Kurdish
movement to intensify its efforts toward the establishment of an independent Kurdish region in
northern Syria. This may hamper the relaunch of a possible reconciliation process with Kurds in
Turkey.
Another salient issue in Turkish politics is the evolving social fabric. In the face of the
government’s authoritarian turn, well-educated, talented Turks have started to emigrate. Reversing
this substantial brain drain from Turkey and restoring a merit-based, rational system of
appointment and promotion in the public sector should be among the top priorities of the
government.
Recent domestic political developments in Turkey have far-reaching consequences for Turkish
foreign policy. The once unquestionable European/Western alliance of Turkey has been called
into question, as the new regime is no longer ideologically committed to gaining EU membership.
The pace and magnitude of Turkey’s autocratization process, and intra-EU constraints (e.g., rise
of populist parties and the right wing in Europe, Brexit, lack of vision on Turkey) render a valuebased framework for EU-Turkey relations unrealistic. Nevertheless, given common interests a
rupture is not a viable option either. As of January 2019, EU-Turkey relations had evolved into a
transactional, interest-driven partnership. However, such a relationship seems to play into the
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BTI 2020 | Turkey
hands of the AKP and may serve to further distance Turkey from the EU’s normative framework.
Given their interconnectedness, the EU is best placed to put normative pressure on Turkey to
relaunch a renewed reform agenda. In this respect, the EU should attach carefully formulated
political conditions to specific areas of great importance for Turkey, such as the modernization of
a customs union or visa liberalization. Another domain where the EU is best suited to make a longterm difference is the enhancement of Turkish civil society and democratic forces in the country.
Another key aspect of Turkish recent foreign policy is its assertiveness, as exemplified in its recent
cross border operations in Syria. Although its readiness to resort to the use of force makes Turkey
an unpredictable and unreliable partner, its fragile economy - which is highly dependent on FDI conditions its regional role. Given its geostrategic location, its size, and involvement in conflicts
in adjacent countries (Iraq and Syria), Turkey will no doubt continue to play an important role in
the Middle East, though its success will be hampered by continuing internal and external policy
challenges. In this respect, international platforms such as NATO and the EU should be used to
ensure Turkey’s involvement in multilateral initiatives.
39