‘Turkey sacks central bank governor’

In this file photo taken on 30 April 2019 the governor of the Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey (CBRT) Murat Cetinkaya speaks at his press conference in Istanbul. Turkey has sacked the governor of its central bank and replaced him with his deputy, a presidential decree published in the official gazette said on 6 July 2019. Photo: AFP
In this file photo taken on 30 April 2019 the governor of the Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey (CBRT) Murat Cetinkaya speaks at his press conference in Istanbul. Turkey has sacked the governor of its central bank and replaced him with his deputy, a presidential decree published in the official gazette said on 6 July 2019. Photo: AFP

Turkey has sacked the governor of its central bank and replaced him with his deputy, a presidential decree published in the official gazette said on Saturday.

Murat Cetinkaya, who was appointed to the role in April 2016, had been replaced by Murat Uysal, the decree said, but gave no official reason for the change.

There had been recent speculation that Cetinkaya could be replaced amid disagreements with the government on cutting interest rates.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has repeatedly railed against high interest rates and called for them to be lowered in a bid to stimulate growth.

Erdogan once called high rates the "mother and father of all evil".

Turkey's main interest rate is 24 per cent after the bank under Cetinkaya made an aggressive rate hike of 625 basis points last September following a currency crisis in August.

Uysal said he would continue to use monetary policy tools "independently" while remaining focused on ensuring price stability as his "main aim", according to a central bank statement.

Uysal, who had served as deputy governor since June 2016, will hold a press conference in the coming days, the bank said.

Turkish inflation fell to 15.72 per cent in June from 18.71 per cent in May, official statistics showed on Wednesday, the lowest rate in nearly a year.