Turkey's industrial production is expected to have expanded 6.5% in March, rising for a 21st consecutive month as factory activity remains strong despite high inflation, a Reuters poll showed Tuesday.
Year-over-year growth has remained positive since coronavirus measures were eased in 2020. On a monthly basis, the index shrank 2.4% in January due to electricity and natural gas cuts at industrial facilities stemming from a technical failure in Iran.
The median estimate in the Reuters poll of seven institutions showed year-over-year growth of 6.5% in the calendar-adjusted industrial production index in March.
Forecasts for the index, seen as a preliminary indicator of economic growth, ranged between 2.5% and 12.5%.
Economists expect the pace of growth in the index to slow in coming months and approach a neutral level around summer. A potential drop in external demand or a supply chain disruption due to Russia's invasion of Ukraine could also impact industrial production after February.
In April of 2020, output plummeted more than 30% in the face of the initial coronavirus wave. It has since made a strong recovery because subsequent measures largely skirted the manufacturing sector and most remaining restrictions were lifted in July of last year.
Turkey's economy grew 11% last year, up sharply from a year earlier, but a sharp selloff in the lira in December affected company and household budgets and increased inflation via import prices.
The coronavirus pandemic, the late-2021 currency drop, which has now been taken under control, and the resulting jump to almost 70% inflation, as well as the fallout from Russia's invasion of Ukraine, are expected to hamper growth in 2022.
The government and the central bank expect around 7% growth in the first quarter of 2022.
The Turkish Statistical Institute (TurkStat) will announce March industrial production figures at 7 a.m. GMT on May 13.