Turkey's shops gradually reduce prices

0 Comment(s)Print E-mail Xinhua, December 31, 2021
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A customer exchanges money in an exchange office in Ankara, Turkey, on Dec. 16, 2021. [Photo/Xinhua]

Turkey's shopkeepers have gradually started to lower the prices of several goods as the Turkish currency lira rebounded, but the decrease appeared to be below expectations for now.

The prices of almost every item in grocery stores, shops, and supermarkets soared during the last two months in particular due to a sharp depreciation of lira, accompanied by high inflation, which was over 21 percent in November.

There was an increase of up to 40 percent in paper towel products, over 400 percent hikes were seen in sunflower oil. Coffee prices have skyrocketed by 300 percent since the beginning of the year, reaching 150 liras per kilogram.

The currency plunged to a record low of 18.30 against one U.S. dollar last week, losing nearly 60 percent of its value since the start of the year. The sharp depreciation of lira forced the government to impose new measures to rescue the currency.

Under the new plan, the lira regressed to around 12 levels against the dollar.

Now all eyes are on the prices of basic goods, which have long started to compel many citizens suffering from financial difficulties.

At a Carrefour store in the Harbiye neighborhood, the price of two liters of sunflower oil was reduced to 59 liras from 69.

Refusing to give more details about the reduction, a Carrefour personnel murmured that the discount is "negligible," and it could even be interpreted as "no decline at all" when considering a 400 percent increase.

Abdullah Gonen, an owner of a supermarket in the Kucukcekmece district of Istanbul, told Xinhua "the declines in prices are not sustainable because the gain of the lira is temporary, and it will keep losing its value against the greenback," while revising the price tag of a pack of diapers from 45 to 39.9 liras.

Hanefi Taylan, an owner of a small grocery store in the Osmanbey neighborhood on the busiest Sisli district, told Xinhua that discounts are coming gradually.

"Prices are at the mercy of wholesalers. If they reduce them, we do it too," he said.

Turkish citizens have also been eagerly waiting for the prices in grocery stores to come down.

"I ordered a small pack of cheddar cheese, a box of cigarettes, and a one-liter bottle of water," Yagmur Iscan, a 29-year-old Istanbul citizen residing in the European side Besiktas district, said on Sunday.

"I couldn't believe to my ears when the cashier asked me to pay 78 liras," she told Xinhua, noting that price hikes had no limit and the situation was unsustainable.

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