For sure, Turkey has been at a historic turning point. Following a fairly tough year, which was full of bomb attacks, a coup attempt and a series of state of emergencies, a key referendum was held on April 16
In today’s Turkey, many white-collar workers with high quality skills and bright students have been seeking for ways to move abroad. Some of them have already made it.
Turkish Energy Minister Berat Albayrak presented a fairly ambitious national energy policy in a meeting that drew the country’s leading businesspeople from the energy, infrastructure and banking sectors.
An unusual anti-competition ruling was made by an Istanbul court this week. I am not a judicial person and will not make any comments regarding the court’s decision. However, this idea deserves to be reviewed, especially in terms of its future effects, mainly over Turkey’s struggling tourism and image.
Some key words have defined the eras of humanity. These discourses, of course, change from country to country or across different ideologies.
Turkey’s construction firms have clinched record-high deals abroad and obtained considerable know-how and experience in realizing top-tier projects.
The Turkish Lira has recently become the worst fragile currency of 2017, even performing worse than the Mexico peso, which has been under big pressure since Donald Trump was elected as the new U.S. president.
A long-awaited update to the Customs Union deal between Turkey and the European Union has the potential to restore strained ties between the two.
Turkey, this week, has made a radical change in the way it calculates its gross domestic product (GDP), creating a shock effect both regarding its revised results and methodology.