UPDATE – Turkish exports stand at $61.6B in January-May

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By Tuba Sahin

ANKARA (AA) – Turkish exports reached $61.6 billion in January-May, down 20% year-on-year amid the coronavirus pandemic, the country's statistical authority said.

Imports also posted a decline of 5.2% to $82.6 billion, resulting foreign trade gap to double and hit $21 billion the first five months of this year.

– May figure

Turkey's exports were nearly $10 billion in May, falling 41% from same month last year while imports also slipped 28% to $13.4 billion.

As exports decreased sharper than imports, foreign trade deficit rose 102.7% year-on-year hitting $3.4 billion in May.

This May, the export-import coverage ratio was 74.5% versus 90.9% in May 2019.

TurkStat said the manufacturing sector's share of exports was 93.8%, while agriculture, forestry and fishing's share was 3.7%, and mining and quarrying's share was 1.9%.

The institute added that the share of high-tech products was 3.8% of manufacturing industries exports and 12.3% of imports.

Intermediate goods took the lion’s share, with 76.7% of overall exports, followed by capital goods (14.5%) and consumption goods (8.4%).

In May, Germany remained Turkey’s top export destination, with exports totaling $919 million. It was followed by the US with $882 million, Iraq with $603 million, the UK with $560 million and France with $416 million.

"The ratio of the first five countries in total exports was 33.9% in May 2020," TurkStat added.

China was the main source of Turkey's imports last month with $1.9 billion, followed by Germany ($1.2 billion), Russia ($1.17 billion), the US ($764 million), and Italy ($483 million).

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