Document Type

Non-Peer Reviewed Publication

Publication Date

Fall 9-1-2020

Publication Title

Is Turkey backsliding on global competitiveness and democracy amid its EU bid in limbo?

Department

Computer Science and Information Systems

College/School

Arthur J. Bauernfeind College of Business

Abstract

Turks have been around for thousands of years, who have established many states and empires in the “land of Turks” referring to Anatolia (Asia Minor) and the Eastern Thrace. The life of Turks, previously in the Altai Mountains of western Mongolia, commenced in the interior of Asia Minor when Seljuqs defeated the Byzantines at Manzikert in 1071 (Malazgirt in Turkish), which also meant the start of Turkification of Asia Minor. After the six century long reign of the Ottoman Empire (1299-1922), Turks were introduced to democracy when Mustafa Kemal abolished the Ottoman Empire in November 1922 by overthrowing Sultan Mehmet VI Vahdettin and established Turkish Republic on October 29, 1923 (The Grand National Assembly elected Mustafa Kemal as President in 1923). After the death of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk (November 10, 1938), Turkey has constantly faced instability- inflicting developments (i.e. coup d'état, coup by memorandum, failed coup attempts, lack of fiscal and structural reforms, political turmoil, ineffective coalition governments, social unrest, chronic deficits, and repeated economic, financial, and currency crises. Turkey’s remarkable economic and democratic performance (6% YoY GDP growth between 2002 and 2007) was halted by endogenous (increasingly dictatorial/authoritarian rule, dysfunctional politics, negative developments in the rule of law, human rights, basic fundamentals, and the Judiciary/legal system) and exogenous factors (the 2008 global financial crisis originated in the U.S.; Cyprus’ veto chapter 15 of Turkey’s EU accession negotiations; prosecution, conviction, and sentencing of the U.S. pastor Andrew Brunson of terrorism charges for taking part in the 2016 failed coup attempt; Turkey’s purchase of Russian S-400 defense system; Turkey’s removal from the F-35 program; the U.S. imposed sanctions/tariffs on steel imports from Turkey; repeated attacks on Turkish lira and the subsequent currency crisis).

Included in

Business Commons

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