Turkey asks companies for explanations in suspected price gouging cases
ANKARA - Reuters
Turkey has asked more than 100 companies to explain what it says are excessive price increases of goods, it said on Oct. 8, in a probe into suspected price gouging after a currency crisis pushed inflation to a 15-year high.
The move comes after President Tayyip Erdoğan last week called on Turks to report unusual price hikes in shops, saying it was the government’s responsibility to raid the inventories of stores if necessary.
The lira has fallen 40 percent this year. Erdoğan, who has cast the sell-off as an economic attack on the country, has said fines would be imposed against "opportunists" who took advantage of the selling to aggressively raise prices.
The Trade Ministry said on Oct. 8 it had asked 114 companies for explanations of the price increases, after inspecting more than 69,000 products at nearly 4,000 companies.
The investigation was not aimed at intervening in the free market, but to prevent unfair price hikes, it said. It did not give information about the companies or products suspected of excessive price increases.
As the currency crisis deepened in August, the government made it illegal for companies to arbitrarily impose price increases if they were not impacted by a rise in input costs or the exchange rate.
Separately, Boyner Group, one of Turkey’s top clothing retailers, said it would introduce a 10 percent discount on the products of more than 30 affiliated brands to help counter inflation. The size of the discount will increase in the future, it said.
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