This book examines all major aspects of the post-crisis economic performance of the Turkish economy. Major sectors of the economy such as agriculture and manufacturing along with key issues such as privatization, export growth, developments in the labour market, poverty and social exclusion are analysed in detail. The authors consider Turkish performance from a comparative perspective, drawing attention to its similarities with the experience of other emerging markets.
Providing an insight into the major difficulties of post-crisis adjustment, sustainability of the gains achieved so far and the challenges that lie ahead, this book will be of interest to academics and scholars in the fields of International Political Economy and Globalization Studies, Middle East Studies and Development Studies, as well as having significance for practitioners in emerging markets.
Ziya Önis is Professor of International Political Economy and Director of the Graduate School of Social Sciences and Humanities at Koç University in Istanbul, Turkey. He has been a Visiting Fulbright Fellow at Princeton University and has participated in World Bank and OECD Development Center projects, as well as being the Associate Editor of the Journal of International Trade and Diplomacy.
Fikret Senses is Professor of Economics in the Department of Economics at the Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey. He was a visiting scholar at Harvard University, Visiting Fulbright Scholar at Columbia University, and editor of METU Studies in Development. His main research interests are trade and industrialization, labour markets, poverty, and development issues with special reference to the Turkish economy.