07 August 2012 | 14:36

Turkish economic miracle woos German businesses

viewings icon comments icon

ПОДЕЛИТЬСЯ

whatsapp button telegram button facebook button
Photo courtesy of toonpool.com Photo courtesy of toonpool.com

As Europe battles its never-ending debt crisis, Turkey, with its flourishing economy, is increasingly attracting the attention of German companies, as well as German-born Turks in search of a job, AFP reports. The Turkish economy is the envy of the crisis-wracked eurozone: its gross domestic product (GDP) has expanded by an annual average 5.4 percent over the past 10 years. Its public debt has fallen below 40 percent of GDP, much lower than the majority of European countries. And inflation, which was once dizzyingly high, is now under control. "Flattening growth in (Europe) will trigger new growth and foreign direct investments in Turkey, making it an indispensable part of long-term strategic planning for European firms," consultancy Roland Berger wrote in a recent study. Turkey has a population of 74 million, of whom more than 60 percent are 35 years old or younger. And with purchasing power growing from year to year, there is strong demand in areas such as infrastructure, energy, cars and the financial sector. These are precisely the sectors where German companies excel: out of around 30,000 foreign companies in Turkey, nearly 5,000 are German, according to the German-Turkish chamber of commerce in Istanbul. Indeed, the number of new German-funded companies set up in Turkey last year shot up by 14 percent to 534. Tedrive Steering, a maker of steering systems and components for the automobile industry, is one of them. The small specialist engineering firm, based in Wuelfrath in Germany's industrialised Ruhr region, has selected Turkey as the site for its first overseas assembly plant. The Turkish automobile market is "growing fast" and "German technology enjoys an excellent reputation there," said the company's chief executive Thomas Bruese. "A lot of German companies have long been present in Turkey, but new subsidiaries, branches and joint ventures are signing up to the chamber of commerce," a sign that they are expanding their activities in the country, said Ralph Jaeger, deputy chief of the chamber of commerce and finance chief of RWE Turkey. RWE, Germany's number two power supplier, is investing 500 million euros ($615 million) in the construction of a gas-fired combined cycle power plant at Denizli, in the south west of Turkey, to supply some 3.5 million households with electricity. The plant is scheduled to be up and running at the end of 2012. RWE and other German companies can benefit from the close social and economic ties that Turkey and Germany have enjoyed for decades. Germany is in fact Turkey's main trading partner, accounting for 10.3 percent of its exports and 9.5 percent of its imports, according to data published by the Germany Trade & Invest development agency. Germany invited hundreds of thousands of Turkish "guest workers" to come and work during the country's economic miracle back in the 1960s. They stayed and some three million Turks now form the largest immigrant population in the country. Indeed, it is the younger generations of those immigrants -- Germans of Turkish origin who are equally at ease in both the Turkish and German languages and cultures -- who are increasingly being recruited by German companies for their Turkish operations, said Jaeger. A private training centre in Kreuzberg, a multi-cultural district in the heart of Berlin, offers apprenticeships in German, English and Turkish in industry and in the hotel sector, with placements in German companies in Turkey. "We want to train young people who will eventually be beneficial to the German economy," said the centre's chief Nihat Sorgec, himself of Turkish origin. "At the same time, it helps to dispel the image of Turks being socially underprivileged. So it's a win-win situation," Sorgec said.

whatsapp button telegram button facebook button copyLink button
Иконка комментария блок соц сети
As Europe battles its never-ending debt crisis, Turkey, with its flourishing economy, is increasingly attracting the attention of German companies, as well as German-born Turks in search of a job, AFP reports. The Turkish economy is the envy of the crisis-wracked eurozone: its gross domestic product (GDP) has expanded by an annual average 5.4 percent over the past 10 years. Its public debt has fallen below 40 percent of GDP, much lower than the majority of European countries. And inflation, which was once dizzyingly high, is now under control. "Flattening growth in (Europe) will trigger new growth and foreign direct investments in Turkey, making it an indispensable part of long-term strategic planning for European firms," consultancy Roland Berger wrote in a recent study. Turkey has a population of 74 million, of whom more than 60 percent are 35 years old or younger. And with purchasing power growing from year to year, there is strong demand in areas such as infrastructure, energy, cars and the financial sector. These are precisely the sectors where German companies excel: out of around 30,000 foreign companies in Turkey, nearly 5,000 are German, according to the German-Turkish chamber of commerce in Istanbul. Indeed, the number of new German-funded companies set up in Turkey last year shot up by 14 percent to 534. Tedrive Steering, a maker of steering systems and components for the automobile industry, is one of them. The small specialist engineering firm, based in Wuelfrath in Germany's industrialised Ruhr region, has selected Turkey as the site for its first overseas assembly plant. The Turkish automobile market is "growing fast" and "German technology enjoys an excellent reputation there," said the company's chief executive Thomas Bruese. "A lot of German companies have long been present in Turkey, but new subsidiaries, branches and joint ventures are signing up to the chamber of commerce," a sign that they are expanding their activities in the country, said Ralph Jaeger, deputy chief of the chamber of commerce and finance chief of RWE Turkey. RWE, Germany's number two power supplier, is investing 500 million euros ($615 million) in the construction of a gas-fired combined cycle power plant at Denizli, in the south west of Turkey, to supply some 3.5 million households with electricity. The plant is scheduled to be up and running at the end of 2012. RWE and other German companies can benefit from the close social and economic ties that Turkey and Germany have enjoyed for decades. Germany is in fact Turkey's main trading partner, accounting for 10.3 percent of its exports and 9.5 percent of its imports, according to data published by the Germany Trade & Invest development agency. Germany invited hundreds of thousands of Turkish "guest workers" to come and work during the country's economic miracle back in the 1960s. They stayed and some three million Turks now form the largest immigrant population in the country. Indeed, it is the younger generations of those immigrants -- Germans of Turkish origin who are equally at ease in both the Turkish and German languages and cultures -- who are increasingly being recruited by German companies for their Turkish operations, said Jaeger. A private training centre in Kreuzberg, a multi-cultural district in the heart of Berlin, offers apprenticeships in German, English and Turkish in industry and in the hotel sector, with placements in German companies in Turkey. "We want to train young people who will eventually be beneficial to the German economy," said the centre's chief Nihat Sorgec, himself of Turkish origin. "At the same time, it helps to dispel the image of Turks being socially underprivileged. So it's a win-win situation," Sorgec said.
Читайте также
Join Telegram Последние новости
EU expanded sanctions against Belarus
Kazhydromet warned residents of Almaty
Kazakhstan celebrates Independence Day
Tokayev honored energy sector workers
Sharp cold snap is coming to Kazakhstan
Forecasters warn Almaty residents
Tokayev arrived in Zhetysu region
Kazhydromet warned residents of Almaty
Лого TengriNews мобильная Лого TengriSport мобильная Лого TengriLife мобильная Лого TengriAuto мобильная Иконка меню мобильная
Иконка закрытия мобильного меню
Открыть TengriNews Открыть TengriLife Открыть TengriSport Открыть TengriTravel Открыть TengriGuide Открыть TengriEdu Открыть TengriAuto

Exchange Rates

 522.58  course up  549.54  course up  5.08  course up

 

Weather

 

Редакция Advertising
Социальные сети
Иконка Instagram footer Иконка Telegram footer Иконка Vkontakte footer Иконка Facebook footer Иконка Twitter footer Иконка Youtube footer Иконка TikTok footer Иконка WhatsApp footer