Turkey’s short-term external debt stock totaled $134 billion as of the end of September, according to official data released on Tuesday.
The country’s external debt stock — maturing within one year or less — rose by 8.8% in September compared to the end of 2019, the Turkish Central Bank announced.
SHORT-TERM DEBT OF PRIVATE SECTOR DECREASED TO 86.8 BILLION DOLLARS
Official data showed that the currency breakdown of the debt stock was composed of 43.2% US dollars, 29% euros, 12.3% Turkish liras, and 15.5% other currencies.
Banks’ short-term external debt stock posted an increase of 1.9% to $57.1 billion and other sectors’ short-term external debt dropped by 4.8% to $55.9 billion during the same period.
The rest of the amount — some $21 billion — belonged to the Central Bank, up from $8.4 billion at the end of the last year, according to the bank’s data. “From the borrowers side, the short-term debt of public sector, which consists of public banks, increased by 4.7% to $26.2 billion. And the short-term debt of private sector decreased by 3.3% to $86.8 billion compared to the end of 2019,” the bank said.
Short-term foreign exchange (FX) loans that banks received from foreign countries rose by 21.4% to $9.3 billion, the data showed.