Türkiye will present its new medium-term program (MTP) on Monday, setting out the country’s economic direction for the 2026–2028 period. The plan will be introduced at a high-level meeting chaired by Vice President Cevdet Yılmaz.
The new MTP aims to address challenges from persistent inflation, global economic uncertainty, and domestic fiscal demands. It will provide updated policies on inflation control, growth targets, structural reforms, fiscal discipline, and public spending.
Officials said the program will continue emphasizing coordination between monetary, fiscal, income, and supply-side policies. The government is expected to outline revised goals on inflation, growth, employment, and trade, while also setting expenditure ceilings for public institutions.
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan recently stated that the current program had passed “stress tests” and announced 2026 as a reform year for the Turkish economy. The existing plan projects economic growth of 4% in 2025, 4.5% in 2026, and 5% in 2027, alongside inflation forecasts of 17.5% in 2025, 9.7% in 2026, and 7% in 2027. Targets also include narrowing the budget deficit, reducing unemployment, and strengthening exports.