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SECOND SEMESTER

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SECOND SEMESTER. TRANSITION TO DEMOCRACY 1945-1950 From Single-Party Era to Multi-Party Era DEMOCRAT PARTY ERA 1950 -1960 Transition to Democracy and Liberalism THE SECOND REPUBLIC 1960-1961 27 May 1960 and the 1961 Constitution PLANNING AND ECONOMIC GROWTH 1961-1973 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: SECOND SEMESTER

SECOND SEMESTER

Page 2: SECOND SEMESTER

TRANSITION TO DEMOCRACY 1945-1950

From Single-Party Era to Multi-Party Era

DEMOCRAT PARTY ERA 1950 -1960

Transition to Democracy and Liberalism

THE SECOND REPUBLIC 1960-1961

27 May 1960 and the 1961 Constitution

PLANNING AND ECONOMIC GROWTH 1961-1973

Problems of Pluralism and Democracy

WORLD RECESSION AND CRISIS 1974-1980

Political and Economic Distress

THE THIRD REPUBLIC AND REFORMS 1980 - 1991

Political and Economic Restructuring

Page 3: SECOND SEMESTER

CREDITS AND DEBITS OF GLOBALIZATION

UPS AND DOWNS AND RECOVERY

Towards the 21st Century

1991 - 2004

Page 4: SECOND SEMESTER

Turkey

moving in the direction of a more effective

parliamentary democracy

Transition to

modern community of mobile, participant citizens

Population increased

13,5 million in 1927 21 million in 1950

The proportion living in cities rose significantly

An increase in urbanization

Page 5: SECOND SEMESTER

Literacy increased

A literate, urban population

New interests and habits

Anxious to be kept informed – Public opinion

The number and circulation of newspapers rose steadily

The number of wireless sets increased

The modernization of communication

Page 6: SECOND SEMESTER

THE END OF STATISM

Statism created capital

&

allowed its accumulation in private hands

Classes became differentiated - Conflicts were bound to arise

 

Difficulty in maintaining the social order

General discontent

The living standard of the peasantry worsened

Page 7: SECOND SEMESTER

THE SECOND WORLD WAR

Uneven distribution of burden when war broke out

1.    Sharp increase in the consumption of soil products

2.    Diminution in agricultural production / producers drafted into the army

 

Shortage of bread

Page 8: SECOND SEMESTER

The villages confronted with the following problems:

1.    Shortage of land

2.    Farming methods and techniques

3.    Large estates – distribution of national income to the agricultural population unbalanced

 

Measures necessitated by war conditions:

 

Industrialization in its initial stage was possible only by exploiting the internal markets, chiefly the rural ones.

 

Heavy taxes levied on agricultural, despite the removal of tithe (aşar)

Page 9: SECOND SEMESTER

The Industrial Workers

Their number increased

Wages in remained extremely low

insufficient for an adequate standard of living

Government control barring the workers from political activity –

Labor Law (1936)

Page 10: SECOND SEMESTER

Industrial workers did not benefit from any government welfare programs until 1945

except for a few measures connected with work safety and hygiene

Ministry of Labor established in 1945.

Trade Union Law enacted in 1947

Welfare needs were tackled in a more basic fashion

Welfare insurance (1945) and paid holidays (1951) laws passed

Page 11: SECOND SEMESTER

National Defence Law (Milli Korunma Kanunu)

January 1940

Crop prices below the market prices

to keep down the cost of bread in the cities

to the peasants’ detriment

Compulsory contribution of crops demanded by the state:

All crops in excess of the amount needed for family consumption and seeding to be delivered to the state.

 Peasants had to sell their belongings to meet the contribution quota.

Page 12: SECOND SEMESTER

The Urban and Rural Middle Classes

Affected by two major laws to:

     a) establish social justice

           b) stimulate agriculture.

 

1.  Tax on capital (Varlık Vergisi) 1942

2. Tax on agricultural products (Toprak Mahsulleri Vergisi)

3.  Land Reform Law (Çiftçiyi Topraklandırma Kanunu) 1945

 

Page 13: SECOND SEMESTER

Tax on capital - Varlık Vergisi

Addition revenue for urgent military expenditures

A tax upon incomes and capital accumulated through unorthodox means,

which could not be subjected to ordinary taxes.

 

On profiteers, businessmen, and intermediaries

who had acquired wealth by speculation and black marketing

with imported goods and essential items.

 

The firms of the minorities were subjected to the tax

in an arbitrary and unrealistic way.

Page 14: SECOND SEMESTER

Land Reform

 

A social reform to ameliorate the situation of the peasant

The purpose:

 

1. Land reform - To distribute land to the landless and land-short peasants sufficient to provide a living

2. Agricultural reform - To furnish equipment for its cultivation - Rationality

 

Produced violent criticism of the government

 

Page 15: SECOND SEMESTER

The deputies divided into two groups:

 1.    Intellectuals and government officials:

adopted a social-intellectual approach. Partitioning the land.

 Natural social consequence of populism – Political viewpoint

 2.    Deputies with some personal land interests

adopted a technical viewpoint.

Improving the cultivation methods.

(Rational agriculture and mechanization)

 Demanded the respect for and guarantee of the right to private property

(The preservation of the status quo of landed property in Turkey)

Page 16: SECOND SEMESTER

Result: The first concerted opposition to the government and the formation of the Democratic Party

 

The People’s Party decided to amend the law

to appease the opposition,

limiting the land to be distributed

to that owned by the government and vakıfs.

 

The expropriation provisions

concerning private property were barely applied.

 

 

Page 17: SECOND SEMESTER

The Memorandum of the Four (Dörtlü Takrir)

By Celal Bayar, Adnan Menderes, Refik Koraltan and

Fuat Köprülü supported by Vatan and Tan

a) Turkish constitution be implemented in full

b) b) Democracy established

 Democratic Party (Demokrat Parti) January 1946

National Development Party (Milli Kalkınma Partisi) 1945

by Nuri Demirağ

The liberalization of the economy

The development of free enterprise 

Page 18: SECOND SEMESTER

RPP extraordinary congress – May 1946

1. Liberalizing measures

2. Direct elections

3. The position of permanent chairman of the party abolished

4. The title of “National leader” (Milli Şef) abolished

After the congress:

1. A liberal press law

2. Autonomy for the university

National elections brought forward from July 1947 to July 1946 Catching the Democrats before they fully established

Page 19: SECOND SEMESTER

 Elections

 DP won 62 of the 465 seats

1. Massive vote-rigging

2. No guarantee of secrecy during the actual voting

3. No impartial supervision of the elections

 

As soon as the results were declared actual ballots were destroyed making any check impossible

Page 20: SECOND SEMESTER

Turkey was desperate for foreign financial assistance

 

To facilitate this applied for membership of the IMF 1947

 

To qualify for membership:

7 September 1947 Decisions

a) A devaluation of Turkish lira by % 120

b) A number of liberalizing measures

aimed at the integration of Turkey into the world economy

Page 21: SECOND SEMESTER

Marshall Plan 1947

Financial support to European countries

a) To help them to rebuild their economies

Complementary aims:

b) To sustain lucrative export market for US industry

b) To eliminate poverty as a breeding ground for communism

Page 22: SECOND SEMESTER

Truman doctrine: 1947

Civil War in Greece

American commitment

Military and financial support for Greece & Turkey

to the defence of anti-communist regimes

Page 23: SECOND SEMESTER

1946 - A new economic Five-Year Plan

similar to pre-war plans

Emphasis on autarky and state control

 

1947 - A new Development Plan

echoed the wishes of the Istanbul businessmen and of the DP

1. Free enterprise

2. Development of agriculture and agriculturally based industry

3. Road instead of railways

4. Development of energy sector (oil)

 

Page 24: SECOND SEMESTER

 

Hardly any difference

between the economic policies of the DP and of the RPP

Exception:

the DP wanted to sell off the state industries (KİT)

Page 25: SECOND SEMESTER

Twelfth of July Declaration

by İnönü (July 1947)

a) Legitimized the existence of the opposition

b) Called upon the state apparatus to be impartial

Defeat of hard-liners in the RPP

1947: Hasan Saka replaced Recep Peker

1949: Şemsettin Günaltay, - a more compromise figure 

Page 26: SECOND SEMESTER

 

1947 RPP Congress

 RPP moved even closer to the DP program

1. Advocated free enterprise

2. Decided to retract article 17 of Land Reform

3. Allowed religious education in the schools

4. Reformed the Village Institutes

Page 27: SECOND SEMESTER

Istanbul Economic Congress - 1948

Support for liberal economic policies

American Missions

American fact-finding missions - commissions

The World Bank Report 1949

influencial in government circles

in line with the 1947 Plan 

Page 28: SECOND SEMESTER

 RECOVERY

1945-1950 - years of growth

(11 % growth in GDP per year)

From very low level of economic activity of WWII

Large gold & foreign exchange stocks

accumulated during WWII

Purchase of chrome ore by belligerents

Nonavailability of imports

Page 29: SECOND SEMESTER

Investment Program

A good position to step up investment program

Machines, contruction materials, etc. to be imported

A disguised form of investment in agriculture

Money Supply

An increase in money supply

Subsidizing basic crops to a level above world prices

(wheat price about double the going world price)

Page 30: SECOND SEMESTER

Tax Burden

Tax burden of rural populace decreased compared to urban population

To stir economic incentiveLarge share of the national income channeled

into the rural areas

Assistance

Military and economic assistance from the US

- International position strengthened

- Domestic investment load lightened

Page 31: SECOND SEMESTER

Autarky came to an end – Incorporation speeded up

Economic growth in agricultural sector

From 1947

Trade surplus changed into a trade deficit

due to fast-rising imports of machinery

Page 32: SECOND SEMESTER

Social policies

 

The ban on organizations with a class base lifted (1946)

Trade unions established – 1946 - linked to socialist parties

Martial law – close them down

 

International Labor Organization

Turkey joined the ILO

Page 33: SECOND SEMESTER

1947 Law on Trade Unions

a) gave to the workers the right of organization in trade unions

b) forbade political activity & strikes 

DP promised to grant workers the right to strike (grev hakkı)

Page 34: SECOND SEMESTER

Restictive policies of the governments

Until 1950 – labor unions acting as adjuncts of the RPP

After 1950 – an independent labor movement

Special courts to handle labor cases (1950)

Weak Trade Unions

because:

a) Small number of industrial workers

b) Low level of education

c) Extreme poverty of working class – insufficient union dues (aidat)

Page 35: SECOND SEMESTER

Private Banking

Yapı Kredi 1944

Garanti 1946

Akbank 1948

The Industrial Development Bank of Turkey

(Sanayi Kalkınma Bankası) 1950

Purpose:

Recruiting capital for private business

at more reasonable terms

Page 36: SECOND SEMESTER

Liberalism

in the air before the Democrats

A powerful industrial bureaucracy

developed under RPP eagis

Difficult to unseat

Page 37: SECOND SEMESTER

By 1950:

Literacy % 34.5

Population : 20.9

Labor force: 10.6 million

Persons employed in industry and crafts: % 8.7 of the labour force

Per capita real income: index 107

(1938 the base year_(100)) - 1929 : 87

Bank deposits: from 197 (1937) to 1.031 million (1950)

Page 38: SECOND SEMESTER

DP = A splinter group from RPP

Split off from the DP

 

Nation Party (Millet Partisi) – Marshal Fevzi Çakmak

A more uncompromising opposition to the RPP

Page 39: SECOND SEMESTER

Election law - Bone of contention – February 1950

1. Free and fair elections

2.Supervision of the elections by the judiciary

The elections of 14 May 1950

– free and fair

– without major incident

– very high turnout ( % 80) (of the electorate casting its vote)

Page 40: SECOND SEMESTER

Electoral system - Majoritarian

DP received 408 seats (% 53.5)

against the RPP’s 69 (39.8)

Nation Party (Millet Partisi) won 1 seat

RPP votes from east of Ankara:

notables, tribal chiefs & large landowners controlled the vote

DP - First political organization with a mass following 

Page 41: SECOND SEMESTER
Page 42: SECOND SEMESTER

Peaceful handover of power (1950)

Peaceful transition

from autoritarianism to multi-party democracy (1946)

Unique experience in the developing world

A democratic heritage

Experiments with parliamentary election (1876)

Multy party democracy (1908-1913) (1924) (1930)

Page 43: SECOND SEMESTER

1950 – 1960 Democrat Party Era

1. Liberal economic policies

2. Authoritarian methods to curb the opposition

3. Relaxation of secularist policies

4. Strengthening ties with the West

1951 and 1953 RPP congresses

1. Six arrows redefined

2. More emphasis on social policies

 

Page 44: SECOND SEMESTER

In 1953 Democrat Party

a) dominated assembly

b) requisitioned all the RPP’s material assets

c) closed People’s Houses (Halkevleri) & People’s Rooms (Halk odaları)

Insecurity within DP

1953 : Amendments

Government control of the press and the universities

 

1954 (before the elections)

The press law tightened 

Page 45: SECOND SEMESTER

 

1954 Elections

Increased DP majority: 503 seats for the DP

RPP left with 31 seats

A tremendous success for Menderes

Massice support of peasantry

Policies vindicated by the economic boom

Page 46: SECOND SEMESTER

 

Nation Party

banned in 1953

reconstituted as the Republican Nation Party

(Cumhuriyetçi Millet Partisi)

won 5 seats in 1954

Page 47: SECOND SEMESTER

Economic Development

 

DP trusted implicitly in the working of the market

 

Foreign Capital

The Law to encourage foreign investment 1951

Foreign investment remained extremely limited

% 1 of total private investment  

No more than 30 firms invested

Page 48: SECOND SEMESTER

 

Emerging Turkish Bourgeoisie

expected to start investing the profits accumulated in the 1940’s

Family businesses

hesitated to invest on the scale desired by DP

Page 49: SECOND SEMESTER

Privatization

of large state enterprises - a dead letter

Contributions

from private sector & foreigners disappointing

 % 40 to 50 of investment came from the State

 

Page 50: SECOND SEMESTER

Investments concentrated:

1. Road network

2. Building industry

3. Agro-industries

 

New roads

Switch to road transport

a changeover from public to privately owned transport

to lower transfort costs

Tied the country together – National market

Opened up access to the villages

More effective marketing and distribution

Page 51: SECOND SEMESTER

End of Railways

The building of railways came to an almost complete halt

Highways

1600 km of hard-surfaced roads in 1950

5400 km of hard-surfaced two-lane highways

built between 1950-1960

with American technical and financial assistance

Turkey obtained the services of the U.S. Public Roads Administration

Fast-rising number of cars, buses and trucks

in private hands

Page 52: SECOND SEMESTER

Effectiveness of the investments

lessened in three ways:

 

1. Investments uncoordinated

2. Quick and tangible results expected

3. Investment decisions politically inspired

  

Page 53: SECOND SEMESTER

  

1. Investments uncoordinated

Menderes - allergic to economic planning

Associated it with the evils of statism

Denounced planning as synonymous with communism

Page 54: SECOND SEMESTER

2. DP wanted quick and tangible results

(to reach the level of Europe within 50 years )

  DP confused development with growth

a) Use of credit facilities and investments short-sighted

b) Aimed at a high level of growth rather than

a long-term improvements in the productive capacity

Page 55: SECOND SEMESTER

 

3. Investment decisions politically inspired

Factories put up in:

a) economically unpromising locations

b) the wrong sectors

Page 56: SECOND SEMESTER

Income distribution & social policies

a) Agricultural incomes grew faster

than non-agricultural incomes

Larger farmers profited most

 

b) Profits grew faster than wages & salaries in the towns

 

Traders and industrialists were relatively better off

 

Page 57: SECOND SEMESTER

 

Worsening inflation from 1955

hit wage- and salary- earners

 

Still, by 1960,

their real incomes had grown considerably

compared

with the immediate post-war years

Page 58: SECOND SEMESTER

Demographic Transformation – Revolution

1. Respectable increase in total population

2. Unbanization:

Mass migration from countryside to towns

Major cities growing by % 10 a year

Labor migration - permanent rather than seasonal

3. Emigration to European countries 

Page 59: SECOND SEMESTER

 

Limited Capacity

of new industries

to accommodate fast-growing but unskilled workforce

Small proportion found permanent jobs in industry

Most of the migrants ended up

as casual labourers or as street vendors

Page 60: SECOND SEMESTER

 

Lack of infrastructure

Cities - not equipped to receive large numbers of new

inhabitants

 

Satellite towns (shanty-towns)

sprang up without infrastructure

No water, electricity, roads, or sewage system

(Gecekondu)

Settlers built their houses

on unused land on the outskirts of town 

Page 61: SECOND SEMESTER

Labour Conditions

 Trade Unions Law of 1947

Most unions were linked to the RPP

through “Workers Bureau” (İş Bürosu)

 

Unions forced on the workers by the RPP

 

DP powerful weapon: The promise to grant

the right to strike

After the elections this promise forgotten

Page 62: SECOND SEMESTER

The trade Unions Confederation (Turk İş) 1952

 

Founded with moral and material assistance

from the International Conference of Free Trade Unions

 

The position of the unions remained week

 

Extremely low living standards of the members

Contributions (Aidat)

insufficient for the running of the organizations

 

Page 63: SECOND SEMESTER

Economic Problems

 Turkey suffered a trade deficit from 1947 onwards

even during the boom years of 1950-53

 

Turkey had a wheat surplus

became a major wheat exporter

The boom was over by 1954 

Weather conditions worsened

Turkey imported wheat once again

Page 64: SECOND SEMESTER

Agricultural growth

 Extensive farming dominant

achieved by a combination of:

1. Extension of the sown area

2. Exceptionally good weather 

Intensive farming marginal

a) Improved agricultural techniques

b) Irrigation

c) Use of fertilizers

Page 65: SECOND SEMESTER

 

Economic growth

fell from around % 13 to % 4

 

Trade deficit

in 1955 was 8 times that of 1950

 

Government kept up

the rate of imports and investment

Page 66: SECOND SEMESTER

Turkey’s strategic position in the Cold War

to get

financial aid and easily borrowing terms

 

In 1960

total external debt stood at 1.5 billion $ = ¼ of the GNP

The weakness of the economy

Solution for financial problems :

effective taxation

taxing the new wealth in the countryside

Page 67: SECOND SEMESTER

Finances

Rich (large) landowners & substantial farmers

earned more than a % 20 of the GDP

paid only 2 % of the total tax revenue

Political considerations

prevented DP from levying taxes in rural areas

 

Page 68: SECOND SEMESTER

 Inflation

Instead of taxation

borrowed from Central Bank, = printing money

Inflation went up

from 3 % in 1950 to 20 % in 1958

hitting

a) wage-earners

b) salary- earners & pensioners

c) consumers in towns 

Page 69: SECOND SEMESTER

Measures (from September 1953)

Import and foreign exchange controls

Ending

1. Five-year period of gradual opening up of the economy

2. Rapid integration into the world economy

 

Page 70: SECOND SEMESTER

From 1954

International financial institutions began to caution DP

Classical “IMF package” prescribed:

1. Devaluation of TL

2. End to artificial prices and to subsidies

3. End to import and export restrictions

DP resisted these pressures

Stuck to official fixed exchange rate of TL

Page 71: SECOND SEMESTER

 Result:

a) Economy deteriorated

b) Inflation grew

Gap between the official rate & the real value of TL widened

Black-market in foreign currency by 1958

Instead of recognizing the economic realities

DP revived National Defense Law

Milli Korunma Kanunu (1940)

to enforce price controls

Result:

Black market = Goods disappeared from shelves

Page 72: SECOND SEMESTER

Finally

DP agreed to the demands of the IMF (August 1958)

1. Devaluated TL

2. Rescheduled debts

3. Rised prices of KİT products

 In exchange: Loan package

 from USA, European countries, IMF

Page 73: SECOND SEMESTER

The debit side of DP’s Economic Policy

Unsound financial and fiscal structure

Creating

1. Huge deficits in balance of payment = Debts

2. Inflation at home = Black market

Page 74: SECOND SEMESTER

The credit side

mobility and dynamism

 

1.  Modernized agriculture

Passage from extensive farming to intensive farming

2.   Increased the industrial base

Large industrial firms have their roots in the 1950s

3.   Built new road network opening up the country

Villages came into contact with the outside world

Page 75: SECOND SEMESTER

From 1954

Economic downturn eroded support for the DP

Reasons:

a) Deterioration in standards of living

Limits put on the imports of consumer goods

b) Rise in the expectations of material improvement

1957 Elections:

Gradual loss of support for DP in the countryside

Still kept the support of the majority

Page 76: SECOND SEMESTER

Serious problem:

Crumbling / decaying support of

1) intellectuals

2) bureaucracy

3) armed forces

Results:

a) Groving economic difficulties = inflation

hitting salaried people, civil servants, pensioners

b) Groving authoritarianismhitting intellectuals & universities

Page 77: SECOND SEMESTER

Measures against the bureaucracy

Suspected of loyalty to İnönü

Increased hold over the bureaucracy

Civil servant: + 25 years of service could be suspended and sent into retirement

Applied also to judges & university professors

Political control over the executive and judiciary

Academic freedom restricted

Page 78: SECOND SEMESTER

The degree of tension:

6-7 Eylül Olayları – Events of September 6-7

Riots of September – The future of Cyprus

Negotiations lead to nationalist fervour, fanned by the press

Expected:

A limited spontaneous demonstration by students

To demonstrate public feeling

Result:

Demonstrations got out of hand

Developed into a pogrom against orthodox citizens

General attack on wealth by the inhabitants of the gecekondus

Page 79: SECOND SEMESTER

Martial law declared (İstanbul, Ankara, İzmir)

Interior minister resigned

Opposition to authoritarian policies within DP (1955)

vis-a-vis the press, the universities & the judiciary

Bone of contention within DP

Right to Prove (Ispat Hakkı)

journalists taken to courts

should have the right to prove the truthof what they have written

Proposal rejected by DP parliamentry group

Page 80: SECOND SEMESTER

Freedom Party (Hürriyet Partisi) - December 1955

Liberal wing broke away from DP

under the leadership of Fevzi Lutfi Karaosmanoğlu

Became the biggest opposition party

Wanted:

A more sophisticated economic policy – planning

Page 81: SECOND SEMESTER

1956

Trend towards authoritarianism continued

National Defence Law revived to control prices and supplies

Press Law changed

to strengthen further government control of the media

Political meetings prohibited except during election campaigns

Elections due in 1958

pulled back (27 October 1957)

Prices of agricultural products raised

Ten-month moratorium on farmer’s debts

Page 82: SECOND SEMESTER

Cooperation between opposition parties

Joint declaration of principles (4 September)

Law (11 September) banned

the use of combined lists in elections

1957 Elections – A major setback for DP

DP = the largest party, but lost the absolute majority in %

DP % 47.3 & 424 seats

RPP % 40.6 & 178 seats (in 1954 31 seats)

FP (extremely disappointing) % 3.8 & 4 seats

Republican Nation Party (ultra-conservative) % 7 & 4 seats

Page 83: SECOND SEMESTER

After the elections

RNP merged with Peasants Party (Köylü Partisi) to form

The Republican Peasants National Party (Cumhuriyetçi Köylü Millet Partisi)

December 1958

FP merged with RPP

Infusion of new ideas to reorientate the RPP

a) social justice

b) democratic safeguards

Page 84: SECOND SEMESTER

Secularism

DP (1957) appealed to religious sentiments

a) Described the Republicans as communists and unbelievers

b) Boasted about the number of mosques and religious schools opened under DP

charged / accused of

a) using religion for political purposes

b) reneging on the secularist principles of the state

Page 85: SECOND SEMESTER

Kemalism (Single-Party Era)

A modernization strategy based on a positivist world vision

Religion seen as a hindrance to progress in modernization

Kemalist secularism

subjugation and integration of religion

into the state bureaucracy

After 1946 (Multi-Party Era)

Parties started to court the Muslim vote

Page 86: SECOND SEMESTER

RPP : (After 1947 congress)

more tolerant of religion

a) Reintroduced elective religious education in schools & training establishments for preachers

b) Faculty of Divinity in Ankara University (1949)

c) Tombs and shrines (türbe) reopened

But: Article 163 (Penal code) :

against religious reaction in politics

Prohobited

propoganda attacking the secular character of the state

Page 87: SECOND SEMESTER

DP (Before 1950)

Great care to emphasize secularism

Islamic currents (Sebilürreşat etc.) attacked the DP

Formation of more radical opposition parties:

Nation Party

Dissolved in 1953

for alleged complicity in reactionary religious plot

Page 88: SECOND SEMESTER

DP (After 1950)

Relaxation of secularist policies

a) Restrictions relaxed on expressions of religious feeling

b) Concessions to the feelings of the Muslim population

c) Koran reading on the wireless

& reversion to Arabic for the prayer call

d) Religious education expended

Page 89: SECOND SEMESTER

e) Parents had to opt out instead of having to opt in

f) The number of preacher schools enlarged

g) Increase in mosque buildings

h) The sale of religious literature allowed again

i) accepted the existence of autonomous religious organizations (legitimized brotherhoods)

Page 90: SECOND SEMESTER

But still:

The DP’s understanding of the secularism

- not significantly different from that of the RPP

- did not end the integration of the religious establishment

into the bureaucracy

-Preacher remained civil servant

-The administration of religious endowments in state hands

Page 91: SECOND SEMESTER

Emergence of anti-secularism

1950-51 Dervish sheikhs came out into the open

with large following

Ticani dervish order started to smash busts of Atatürk

Persecuted vigorously by the government

Their leader, Kemal Pilavoğlu sent to jail

Law against defaming Atatürk’s memory passed in 1951

However

Nurcu movement supported DP in the elections

Page 92: SECOND SEMESTER

DP tacitly admitted:

Religion was not necessarily incompatible with development

Within the army

seen as betrayal to the Kemalist traditions

Result:

Islam made much prominent in everyday life in the cities

Seen a a resurgence of Islam by intellectuals

Obscurantism or traditional culture of the mass of population ?

Interpreted as:

The former subject class reasserting its right to express itself

Page 93: SECOND SEMESTER

Economic policies of RPP and DP

differed in emphasis

Not in direction

SEE not turned over to private capital

State continued to invest heavily

Page 94: SECOND SEMESTER

Illiberal spirit

After 1954 – DP sought to buttress their strong position

by restricting political liberties

1954-59Prosecutions of journalists, editors and newpaper owners

Ammendments to the press & libel laws – 1956

Severe penalties for criticizing persons in official positions

Control of the allocation of newsprint – 1958

Page 95: SECOND SEMESTER

Amendments to Civil Service Law 1954

a) Government empowered to retire judges and university teachers after 24 years service or at age 60

b) Dismissal of civil servants after a period of suspension

Activites of political parties curtailed

Amendment to the electoral law to prevent electoral coalitions

All public meetings & demonstrations banned

except in the 45 day campaign period preceding elections

Page 96: SECOND SEMESTER

Rise in the temperature

1960

Commission to investigate activities of the opposition

(tahkikat komisyonu)

Opposition accused inter alia of interfering with the army &

with arming its own followers

Page 97: SECOND SEMESTER

Commission set up with powers

a) To suppress newspapers

b) Subpoena persons and documents

c) To imprison for up to 3 years those who impeded its investigations

The effect of the restrictions

Political strife driven out into the streets

Dubious legitimacy of the measures

Encouraged illegitimate means of action

Page 98: SECOND SEMESTER

Opposition strong in large towns

Particularly amongst students

Educated sections of society

a) Schools & Universities

b) Civil service

c) Military officer class

Former elite displaced from the center of the stage

Fall in purchasing power of the salaries

Displaced as the elite in society

New centers of wealth and influence

Page 99: SECOND SEMESTER

Necessity to call in the army to suppress demonstrations

Army – sympathy with İnönü

Why did DP cling so obstinately to power ?

1 . The character of the DP leadership.

2. Restriction on personal basis rather than rational basis

3. Excessive confidence in their popularity & their own legitimacy

Page 100: SECOND SEMESTER

1 . The character of the DP leadership.

Active participation in the authoritarian RPP

not democratic by training

2. Restriction on personal basis rather than rational basis

İnönü complex.

frustrated in the RPP

unable to unseat İnönü

3. Excessive confidence in their popularity & their own legitimacy

Support of the bulk of the electorate

Little interference with traditional and religious customs

Underestimated the power of the Opposition

Page 101: SECOND SEMESTER

The Second Turkish Republic 1960-1980

 The military takeover of 27 May 1960

a)    “to prevent fratricide”

b)   “to extricate the parties from the irreconcilable situation into which they had fallen”

 

The conspirators:

a number of radical colonels, majors and captains

 

Greeted with explosions of public joy among student an the intelligentsia.

 The rest of the country showed no such reaction.

Page 102: SECOND SEMESTER

General Cemal Gürsel: as a figurehead,

former commander in-chief of the land forces

 National Unity Committee (NUC) (Millî Birlik Komitesi)

headed by Cemal Gürsel – 38 officers -

Alpaslan Turkeş – the most influential member

Declaration of professors justifying the intervention:

DP acted unconstitutionally

The investigatory commission – tahkikat komisyonu

became illegal 

Page 103: SECOND SEMESTER

Young Turks

Tradition of military leadership of modernizatation

ceased to be under the Single-Party regime

Fevzi Çakmak = Millet Partisi

Restructuring of Army in the 50s.

Extensive rearming and retraining of the military (NATO)

The modern army = the most progressive element

The process of modernization created expectations

Under the guise of Atatürkism

Underlying factor encouraging the military to intervene:

A combination of frustration & renewed self-confidence

Page 104: SECOND SEMESTER

Most prestigious elements in society in the 1950’s

Free professions in law, medicine, engineering and the like.

Not military nor civil servants

Social background &

social and economic views of the instigators of the coup

NUC – discontented with DP’s economic and social policies

a) A more balanced economic growth

b) A more equitable distribution of wealth

c) Land reform

DP social justice was not a main consideration

Page 105: SECOND SEMESTER

NUC decision (3 August)

to retire 235 out of 260 generals &

some 5000 colonels and majors

 

Democrat Party suspended on 31 August

&

dissolved on 29 September 1960 

Page 106: SECOND SEMESTER

A provisional constitution – 12 June 1960

giving legal basis both to the coup and to NUC

The cabinet of technocrats as an executive organ

To finalize the text of the constitution

The Constituent Assembly (Kurucu Meclis) convened in January 1961

 

Consisted of two chambers: bicameral parliament

1. An upper house : the NUC

2. A lower house: 272

representatives of the remaining political parties, professional groups and of the provinces

Page 107: SECOND SEMESTER

The new constitution: (1961) to prevent a power monopoly

By counterbalancing the National Assembly (Millet Meclisi) with other institutions.

1. A second chamber, called the Senate (Senato)

2. An independent Constitutional Court (Anayasa Mahkemesi)

3. Full autonomy for the judiciary, the universities and the mass media

4. Proportional representation:

to lessen the chance of one party holding an overwhelming majority

5. A full bill of civil liberties

6. A constitutional role for the military:

the National Security Council (NSC) (Milli Güvenlik Kurulu)

Page 108: SECOND SEMESTER

National Security Council (NSC) March 1962

(Milli Güvenlik Kurulu)

advised the government on internal and external security.

Members: 

The chief of the general staff, the service chiefs &

the ministers concerned

A powerful watchdog,

sometimes replacing the cabinet

as the center of real power and decision-making

Page 109: SECOND SEMESTER

The referendum

on the new constitution (9 July 1961)

A severe setback for the forces of 27 May

Accepted with 61.7 against 38.3 per cent of the votes cast

 

The ban on political activity lifted (13 January 1961)

RPP + RPNP reactivated

Page 110: SECOND SEMESTER

New Parties

1) The Justice Party

headed by Ragıp Gümüşpala; retired general

Primary goal

full rehabilitation of the retired officers and arrested democrats

2) The Workers Party of Turkey (February 1961)

headed by Mehmet Ali Aybar, publicist, lawyer, former U. teacher

3 ) The New Turkey Party

headed by Ekrem Alican

Page 111: SECOND SEMESTER

The parliamentary elections (15 October 1961)

RPP gained 36.7 per cent: (171 seats) disappointed

JP polled 34.7 per cent (158 seats)

The New Turkey Party got 13.9 per cent:

A continuation of the Freedom Party

founded by dissident Democrats in 1955

The conservative RPNP polled 13.4 per cent

Page 112: SECOND SEMESTER

Taken together,

the parties which were considered heirs to DP

were clearly still the strongest in the country

The new constitution more liberal than the old one:

It tolerated a wider spectrum of political activity than before,

both to the left and to the right

Page 113: SECOND SEMESTER

 

The trial of the old regime: Yassıada Mahkemeleri

 

31 sentenced to life imprisonment &

418 to lesser terms,

while 15 sentenced to death (11 death sentence commuted).

AdnanMenderes, Fatin Rüştü Zorlu and Hasan Polatkan hanged

Celal Bayar’s death sentence

commuted

because of his advanced age

Page 114: SECOND SEMESTER

A Period of Transition – the Period of Coalitions

 

Heavy pressure on the two party to collaborate in a coalition

to be led by İsmet İnönü

 The First İnönü Coalition

A marriage of convenience, not love

Failure: a) the amnesty for the former DP politicians

b) the project for a planned economy

The JP rejected as insufficient a proposal to reduce the sentences of the Democrats 

Page 115: SECOND SEMESTER

 The Second İnönü Coalition

İnönü formed a new cabinet

A coalition with the two smaller parties

Many frictions

The worst: the proposal for a land tax

Page 116: SECOND SEMESTER

Cemal Gürsel asked the JP leader, Ragıp Gümüşpala

to form a government.

He failed in his attempt

 

The Third İnönü Coalition

A minority coalition of RPP and independents

JP brought it down

 his budget is not approved

A Caretaker Cabinet

headed by Suat Hayri Ürgüplü (a former diplomat)

 

Page 117: SECOND SEMESTER

Elections in October 1965

 

JP won a landslide victory

gaining an absolute majority of the votes cast (52.9 per cent)

RPP was down to 28.7.

The other parties gained les than 7 per cent

Workers’ Party in the parliament: 15 deputies

Page 118: SECOND SEMESTER

Demirel, prime minister.

 He dominated Turkish politics for the next five years

 

Goods years for Turkey

High economic growth &

Continual increases in real incomes

 

Demirel’s most important achievementReconciliation of the army & the rule by civilians

The price paid: The armed forces were granted almost complete autonomy

Page 119: SECOND SEMESTER

JP was a coalition of

1.    industrialists

2.    small traders and artisans

3.    peasants and large landowners

4.    religious reactionaries

5.    Western-orientated liberals

 

It had very little ideological coherence

 

Page 120: SECOND SEMESTER

Demirel’s frequent recourse to two tactics

  To preserve the unity of the party and his own position

1.  Emphasis on the Islamic character of the party

He stood for traditional values

Flirt with leaders of Nurcu movement

 

2. Constant anti-communist propaganda campaign &

harassment of leftist movements

Page 121: SECOND SEMESTER

He became unpopular among intellectuals

But his support held up well in the countryside

The elections of 1969

 JP suffered slight losses ( %46.5)

RPP polled only % 27.4

 

JP formed a new cabinet

Slightly more centrist than the old one

 

Page 122: SECOND SEMESTER

Problems within JP – Opposition to Demirel.

He lost the support of the most conservative wing

a) Anatolian landowners

&

b) small traders and artisans

over his proposals for new taxation

to help pay for industrialization

Page 123: SECOND SEMESTER

February 1970

The right wing of the JP voted with the opposition

& forced Demirel to resign

 March 1970

New cabinet - No alternative to Demirel 

Rift superficially healed

Page 124: SECOND SEMESTER

December 1970

41 deputies and senators left the JP

&founded the Democratic Party (Demokratik Parti)

led by Ferruh Bozbeyli

its name, recalling DP

Page 125: SECOND SEMESTER

New definition for RPP - Left of Center

The RPP moved left of center (Ortanın Solu)

 

A new manifesto in the 1965 elections

written by two coming men of RPP

Turhan Feyzioğlu and Bülent Ecevit

 

Page 126: SECOND SEMESTER

Emphasis on social justice and social security

without being explicitly socialist

 

To mobilize the votes of

1) workers

2) 2) inhabitants of the shanty towns (slum areas of towns)

Page 127: SECOND SEMESTER

RPP new stance did not profit in 1965 elections

Lacked credibility as a progressive party

The people in the squatter towns basically villagers

who had moved to the big city

taking their village values with them

 

as in the villages, they voted JP

 

Page 128: SECOND SEMESTER

JP propogandists’ tactics:

Left of center is the road to Moscow

Ortanın Solu Moskova’nın Yolu

 

Page 129: SECOND SEMESTER

After the defeat – Acrimonious debate – Infighting

Blaming “the left-of-center” tactics

Extraordinary Congress of RPP - 1967

Increase of the central office’s hold over the party

Party dicipline

Page 130: SECOND SEMESTER

A group of 47 representatives and senators

who opposed the left-of-center line

left the party

to found the Güven Partisi (Reliance Party)

led by Turhan Feyzioğlu

Ecevit’s main competitor for the position of “Crown prince”

Personal jealousy

Page 131: SECOND SEMESTER

The growth of political radicalism

 

On the left:

A growing student population

&

a growing industrial proletariat

 

On the right:

JP policies served the interests of

the modern industrial bourgeoisie, of big business

 

Page 132: SECOND SEMESTER

However, JP’s electoral base consisted of

a) farmers

&

b) small businessmen

They became the prime targets of both

a) the Islamic party

b) the ultra-nationalist party

Page 133: SECOND SEMESTER

The NAP led by Alpaslan Türkeş

(National Action Party / Milli Hareket Partisi)

 From RPNP – 1969

Hierarchically organized, militant with ultra-nationalist program – Nine Lights (Dokuz Işık)

Youth Organization – Ülkü Ocakları + Bozkurtlar

Page 134: SECOND SEMESTER

The NOP ( National Order Party / Milli Nizam Partisi ) 1970

headed by Necmettin Erbakan.

Voice of smaller businessmen 

They posed a serious threat te Demirel’s power

Political violence in the late 1960s

Bombing attack, robbery and kidnapping  

Page 135: SECOND SEMESTER

The violence of the left met and surpassed by violence from the militant right

By early 1971:

Demirel weakened by defections - Became paralyzed

 

He was powerless to curb the violence

on the campuses and in the streets.

 

He could not hope to get

any serious legislation on social or financial reform

passed in the assembly

Page 136: SECOND SEMESTER

12 March Memorandum (12 Mart Muhtırası)

Handed by the chief of the general staff

It amounted to an ultimatum by the armed forces

 

The memorandum demanded:

 

A strong and credible government

to end the “anarchy”&

and carry out reforms “in a Kemalist spirit”.

 

If demands were not met, the army would “exercise its constitutional duty” and take over power itself.

Page 137: SECOND SEMESTER

Demirel resigned

İnönü denounced any military meddling in politics

 

The new government installed by the generals

headed by Nihat Erim, member of the right wing of the RPP

Ecevit, infuriated, resigned as secretary-general.

 

A cabinet consisted largely of technocrats

from the outside the political establishment.

 Erim announced that his government:

1.    restore law and order

2.    enact a number of long-overdue socio-economic reforms

Page 138: SECOND SEMESTER

Atilla Karaosmanoğlu (World Bank) drew up a reform program:

 1.    Land reform

2.    A land tax

3.    Nationalization of the mineral industry

4. Joint ventures to protect Turkish industry at least 51 per cent Turkish-owned

 

Stubborn opposition from vested interests in business and agriculture

But sophisticated industrialists

like Vehbi Koç Koç and Nejat Eczacıbaşı

supported the reform proposals

Page 139: SECOND SEMESTER

Renewed terrorist attacks

NSC proclaimed martial law in 11 provinces.

 Renewed every two months for two years

Persons suspected of terrorism round up

Witch-hunt - The persecution of the left

Even progressive liberal sympathisers 

5000 people arrested,

leading intellectuals (writers, journalists, professors),leading members of the Workers Party of Turkey

prominent trade unionists

 

The NOP & WPT closed down in May & July

Page 140: SECOND SEMESTER

Erbakan allowed to resume his activities in October 1972

under Milli Selamet Partisi (National Salvation Party)

 

Erim to compromise with the conservatives in the assemby

 Demirel’s old ministers in the cabinet

11 reformist technocrats resigned

Replaced by politicians from the right 

Erim’s new cabinet

amendments to the constitution

aiming at making it less liberal

support of the parties of the right

Page 141: SECOND SEMESTER

 44 articles were changed.

Basically:

1. Limits by law to the civil liberties (Article 11).

2. End to the autonomy of the universities and of radio and TV

3. Limit to freedom of the press

4. The powers of the Constitutional Court curtailed

5. The powers of the NSC increased

giving unsolicited advice to the cabinet - Binding advice

6. Special State Security Courts (DGM) instituted

to try over 3000 people

Abolished in 1976

Page 142: SECOND SEMESTER

The assembly refused

the right to rule by decree (kanun hükmünde kararname)

Nihat Erim resigned (April 1972)

 

Succeeded by Ferit Melen

one of the leaders of the Reliance Party

Collaborated more closely with JP

Ecevit’s principled stance 

Ecevit ousted İnönü from the RPP chairmanship

succeeded him (Party conference in May 1972).

İnönü resigned from the RPP (November 1972)

Page 143: SECOND SEMESTER

The term of office of Cevdet Sunay (1966-1973) came to an end

 

The army put forward the chief of general staff Faruk Gürler

as his successor

 

Gürler was defeated

Fahri Korutürk, a retired admiral, became the president

 

He appointed the economist Naim Talu

to lead a caretaker government

to take the country to the free elections

Page 144: SECOND SEMESTER

October 1973 Elections:

 produced a surprise result

RPP polled 33.5 per cent against 29.5 per cent won by JP

None of the parties had an absolute majority

 Long-drawn-out negotiations

January 1974 - a new cabinet

Based on the surprising combination of RPP with NSP

 

A marriage of convenience: Common basis: the distrust of

a) European and American influence

b) big business.

Page 145: SECOND SEMESTER

Cyprus crisis broke out – Invasion of Cyprus

Ecevit became a national hero overnight

He wanted to use his new popularity

to gain an absolute majority in early elections

Resigned in September 1974

 

A major miscalculation

A caretaker cabinet under Professor Sadi Irmak

 Demirel finally formed a coalition: First Nationalist Front

JP, the NSP, the NAP, RRP and defectors from the DP

Bribing them with cabinet posts – 30 ministers

Page 146: SECOND SEMESTER

Disproportioned influence of NSP & NAP

Colonizations of ministries in an unprecedented way

Thousands of civil servants discharged or demoted

Replaced with party loyalists

Increased violence and economic crisis

The elections of 1977

Ecevit’s popularity RPP,got % 41.4

JP went up to % 36.9

A stalemate

Attempt by Ecevit to form a coalition with the independents

Failure

Page 147: SECOND SEMESTER

Second “Nationalist Front” coalition by Demirel

Influence of the NSP and NAP greater than in the first one

 Short lived. JP deputies defected

 

Ecevit formed a cabinet with defectors now independents

The independents given cabinet posts

It survived until October 1979

 

It could not master the rising tide of violence

Page 148: SECOND SEMESTER

The military grew increasingly disillusioned with

Ecevit’s soft attitude to terrorism and Kurdish separatism

 

October 1979 elections for the senate

Drop in support for the RPP

Defections from RPP

Ecevit lost majority - Resigned

 

Demirel returned to power

Minority government supported by independents

Page 149: SECOND SEMESTER

JP-RPP coalition

proved impossible to realize throughout 1973-80

They were unable to cooperate

 The political system gradually became paralysed

giving small extremist groups disproportionate influence

 

Polarization of the big parties due to ideological factors

 

President Fahri Korutürk’s term ended in 1980

Paralysis -The assembly proved incapable of electing president

after 100 rounds of voting

Page 150: SECOND SEMESTER

Two overwhelming problems Turkey faced in the 1970s.

 

(1) Political violence (2) Economic crisis.

 

The development policies of the governments were aimed at

the substitution of imports through industrialization

 

Direct investment incentives, such as subsidies and tax rebates

Page 151: SECOND SEMESTER

The creation of a home-grown industry in three main ways:

 

1. Extensive import restrictions and high tariffs

 

2. Manipulation of the exchange rate

3. Creation of a buoyant internal market

Page 152: SECOND SEMESTER

1. Extensive import restrictions and high tariffs

to keep out European and American industrial products

 

2. Manipulation of the exchange rate

by keeping the rate of the TL artificially high

 Firms which were allowed to purchase $ or DM from the Gov. to buy foreign materials comparatively cheaply

3. Creation of a buoyant internal market through Populism:

a) paying high guarantee prices to farmer (above world price)

b) allowing industrial workers high wage rises

Page 153: SECOND SEMESTER

Industries

which would never have been able to compete on world market

made handsome profits on the home front.

 

New industries spread unevenly among regions

 

Vast majority established in the Istanbul area

smaller concentrations around İzmir and Adana

 

Import-substitution strategy

successful for some time

1963 - 1976 the annual rate of growth averaged % 6.9

Page 154: SECOND SEMESTER

Role of the state economic enterprises still important

% 40 of total industrial production

 

But it was inefficient:

1) Political 2) Social

1. Business decisions in the state state sector, including the pricing of products, remained politically influenced.

 

2. Huge overstaffing as a result of patronage system

 

Result: Heavy losses to be covered through the budget

Page 155: SECOND SEMESTER

New industries heavily dependent on imports(foreign parts & materials for production)

and thus

on the availability of foreign reserves to pay for them

Economy became extremely vulnerable

 

Since the 1950s

Increasing dependence on oil as a source of energy

 

The oil crisis of 1973-74

quadrupled the price of oil on the international market

Steep rise in import bill

Page 156: SECOND SEMESTER

After the second oil price shock in 1979-80

2/3 of foreign currency earnings to meet oil bill

Recession in Europe

Western market for Turkish products declined

 

For a while it was possible to keep up economic growth

By depleting the Central Bank’s foreign reserves

Page 157: SECOND SEMESTER

Using the transfers of the Turkish workers in Germany

 

Transfers began to decline steeply after 1974:

a) Recession – Unemployment

b) Political unrest – Loss of trust

1. The situation of the workers in Europe deteriorated

2. They lost confidence in the situation in Turkey

 They kept their money in Germany

 

Page 158: SECOND SEMESTER

Nationalist Front coalition governments tried to solve problems by:

1.    concluding costly short-term Eurodollars loans

2.    printing money

3.    conserving foreign reserves through import restrictions

 

Oil for industry and electricity generating became scarce

By 1979 power cuts of up to 5 hours a day

a) Rising price of energy b) Irresponsible financial policies

fuelled inflation

Page 159: SECOND SEMESTER

Inflation running around % 20 during the early 1970s

 

By 1979 it was at % 90

 

To keep inflation down:

1) price control thought price-control board

 Result = huge black market

 2) Artificially high rate of exchange for the TL

But devaluation always came too late

Page 160: SECOND SEMESTER

Import restrictions imposed to save foreign exchange

a) fuelled the black market

b) gave rise to large-scale smuggling

 

Radical measures

to extricate Turkey from its financial and economic impasses

 

Ecevit began negotiating with IMF, World Bank and OECD

for new credits (1978)

Creditors demanded drastic economic reforms

Agreement to release 1.8 billion $ in new credits (July 1979)

Page 161: SECOND SEMESTER

Dependent on a reform program to be implemented  

1. Abolishing import and export controls

2. Cutting subsidies

3. Freeing interest rates

4. Raising prices

5. Cutting government expenditure

Demirel’s government

The task of implementing given to Turgut Özal

the under-secretary for economic affairs in charge of planning

Page 162: SECOND SEMESTER

24 January 1980

he launched the reform package (called “Chilian solution” )

credits began to arrive

 

Widespread resistance

 

Activity of the trade unions

made it impossible to implement economic package

 

Members of DISK occupied factories - Strikes

 accompanied by clashes the security forces

Page 163: SECOND SEMESTER

The Third Republic

The coup: 12 September 1980

Armed forces took over political power – To save democracy

The communiqué

State organs had stopped functioning

 

Page 164: SECOND SEMESTER

The uprooting the existing political system

 

1.    Parliament dissolved

2.    Cabinet deposed

3.    Immunity of the deputies lifted

4.    Political leaders arrested

5.    Political parties suspended, then abolished.

6.    Radical trade unions confederations, DİSK and MİSK suspended

7.    Mayors and municipal councils dismissed

A state of emergency declared

Page 165: SECOND SEMESTER

Concentration of all power in the hands of the military

National Security Council (Milli Güvenlik Konseyi)

headed by General Kenan Evren

Officially declared head of state (14 September) 

Local commenders, under martial law, given wide-rangin powers

Closures of newspapers – Arrests of journalists & editors

Eventual return to democratic system envisaged

 

Page 166: SECOND SEMESTER

 

Enforcement of radical changes

before handing power back to the civilians  

Undoing work of their predecessors,

perpetrators of 27 May

Saw their task:

a) saving democracy from the politicions

b) Purging the political system

A 27-member cabinet under Bülent Ulusu (Retired admiral)

Composed of bureaucrats and retired officers

Page 167: SECOND SEMESTER

A wave of arrests swept the country

In the first 6 weeks after the coup 11.500 people arrested

By the end of 1980 the number grew to 30.000

After one year 122.600 arrests had been made

 

Number of politically motivated terrorists attacks diminished

but at great human and social cost

 

Trials were held before military courts and under martial law

Within 2 years 3600 death sentences were pronounced

15 were carried out.  Tens of thousands of lesser sentences

Page 168: SECOND SEMESTER

The new constitution prepared by a constitutional committee

headed by Professor OrhanAldıkaçtı

 

A constituent assembly (Danışma Meclisi) of 160 members met on 23 October 1981.

(120 appointed by the military governors, 40 by the NCS)

Elected 15-member constitutional committee 

The Constitution of 1982

 

A reversal of the 1961 constitution

Page 169: SECOND SEMESTER

 

1. Concentration of power in the hands of the executive

2. Increase of the powers of the president and the NSC

3. Limits to freedom of the press, freedom of trade unions (banning political strikes, solidarity strikes & national strikes)

4. Limits to rights and liberties of the individual

 

The usual rights and liberties (freedom of speech, freedom of association, etc) were included in the constitution

Page 170: SECOND SEMESTER

R & L could be annulled, suspended or limited

on the following considerations:

1.    the national interest,

2.    public order,

3.    national security,

4.    danger to the republican order and public health.

Constitution subjected to a referendum 7 November 1982

 Voting made compulsory

Anyone who chose not to, or neglected to, vote

a) had to pay a fine and b) lost the right to vote for five years

Page 171: SECOND SEMESTER

Criticism banned

a) the constitution

b) b) speeches General Evren held in favour of yes vote

 The referendum yielded expected result:

a yes vote of 91.4 per cent

 

New Law on Political Parties promulgated (March 1983)

 

Politicians active before September 1980 banned from politics

for ten years.

Page 172: SECOND SEMESTER

New parties could be formed

but their founders needed the approval of the NSC

 

Students, teachers & civil servants barred from party membership

 

Parties not allowed

a) to found women’s or youth branches

b) b) to develop links with trade unions

c) to open branches in villages.

15 parties founded,

but 12 not approved by the military

Page 173: SECOND SEMESTER

3 parties allowed to take part in the elections

 1.    The Party of Nationalist Democracy Milliyetçi Demokrasi Partisi Identified with and supported by the generals Led by retired general Turgut Sunalp.

2.    The Populist Party Halkçı Partı

led by Necdet Calp.

3. The Motherland Party Anavatan Partisiled by Turgut Özal.

 

Turgut Özal - behind the economic reform program served as a minister in charge of the economy under the military regime (Bülent Ulusu goverment)

Page 174: SECOND SEMESTER

6 November 1983 Elections

MP scored an overwhelming victory polling over % 45

PP did reasonably well to poll % 30

PND came the third with % 23

 

New electoral system heavily weighted in favor of majority

To limit the disproportionate influence of the small parties Before 1980 = one of the reasons for the breakdown of system

The % 45 gave the MP an absolute majority

Page 175: SECOND SEMESTER

Under Turgut Özalslow process of further democratization went on

 

Before the municipal elections of March 1984

the parliament voted to allow some of the parties

which had been banned the year before to participate

 

The Municipal elections of March 1984

 

The MP did only marginally less well than five months earlier % 41.5

Page 176: SECOND SEMESTER

The Social Democratic Party 23.5 per centSosyal Demokrat Parti led by professor Erdal İnönü

 

The True Path Party polled % 13.5 Doğru Yol Partisi, Demirel’s party, though fronted by other politicians,

 

The National Salvation Party, got % 4.5 of the vote

 

The Populist Party less than % 9

 

The Party of Nationalist Democracy only % 7

Page 177: SECOND SEMESTER

Strange political landscape

 

Opposition parties in parliament lost their legitimacy

 

Parties with sizeable portion of the electorate behind them

not represented on a national level

Solutions:  

On the Left:

PP and SDP merged to form Social Democratic Populist Party

Sosyal Demokrat Halkçı Parti - SPP - November 1985.

Page 178: SECOND SEMESTER

A new challenger for the inheritance of old RPP

The Democratic Left Party Demokratik Sol Partisi - DSP

Led from behind the scenes by Bülent Ecevitfronted by his wife, Rahşan Ecevit - party chairwoman

 The Ecevits

a) depicted SPP as elitist and old fashioned

b) declared the PDL as the only true workers’ party

On the Right

The leadership of PND dissolved the party - May 1986

Representatives joined the MP & PTP

Page 179: SECOND SEMESTER

18 members of SPP deserted to the PDL - December 1986

giving PDL representation in parliament

 

Özal accepted the challenge of the old guard

Referendum on a change in the constitution

to allow the old politicians to take part in politics

Page 180: SECOND SEMESTER

 Referendum - 6 September 1987.

 % 50.24 yes against % 49.76 no

The result of the referendum led Özal to announce

early national elections

Page 181: SECOND SEMESTER

29 November 1987 Elections

 

The MP managed to retain its absolute majority

MP polled % 36.3

SPP % 24.5

PTP came third - % 19.2

Other parties failed to pass the threshold (% 10)

 

Page 182: SECOND SEMESTER

March 1989: Municipal elections

The results:

Support for the MP severely eroded

SPP came out on top, % 28.2

PTP came second % 25.6

MP managed only third place % 21.9

Page 183: SECOND SEMESTER

Evren’s term came to an end - November 1989

Regardless of the electoral result

Özal stood as presidential candidate

The opposition boycotted the session of the TBMM

in which the new president was elected

Page 184: SECOND SEMESTER

Reasons for the decline of Özal’s popularity

 

High inflation - back to pre-1980 level of around % 80

Erosion of purchasing power

 

2. Nepotism and corruption surrounding the regime

 

Page 185: SECOND SEMESTER

 

Özal’s belief:

Unrestricted capitalism free-for-all

Resulted in a number of business scandals

 Özal family criticized for

a) nepotism

b) corruption in their business activities

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20 October 1991 Elections:

 

PTP won the elections %27

MP % 24

SPP - disappointing result % 20

% 20 included votes for People’s Labour Party (Halkın Emek Partisi)

Their candidates contested the elections on the SPP slate

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Personal animosity between Demirel and Özal prevented coalition

A coalition of PTP and SPP

Süleyman Demirel: Prime Minister

Erdal İnönü: Vice Prime Minister

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1980-1991

The efforts to restructure the economy

24 January 1980 :“The “stabilization program”

 

Turgut Özal

the architect of the IMF-inspired economic reform package

of the last Demirel cabinet

The Program become effective after  12 September 1980: Military takeover

 

The suppression of

the trade unions and the political left by the military

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Renewal of confidence for Turkey

International business world and financial community represented by

the IMF, the World Bank and the OECD,

 

Flow of credits, denied to pre-1980 governments, resumed.

 

 

National debt

grew from 13.5 billion $ to 40 billion $ in 1989.

But the repayment posed no real problems

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The aims of the program. Threefold

 

1.    To improve the balance of payments

2.    To combat inflation

3.    To create an export-orientated free market economy

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The means employed to attain these goals:

 

1.    A drastic (and ongoing) devaluation of the TL, to make Turkish exports competitive in foreign markets.

 

2.    A lager rise in interest rates, to reduce over consumption and thus inflation.

 

3.    Freezing wages to increase competitiveness and lower inflation

 

4.    Raising prices through the abolition or reduction of state subsidies 

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Exports were encouraged through a set of specific measures:

 

1.    Subsidies for exporters

2.    Simplification of the notoriously complicated bureaucratic export procedures

3.    Abolition of the customs duties on imported inputs for export-orientated industries

 

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A drop in real purchasing power

of between %40 - 60

for most wage-earners in the years 1979-89

Caused by: 

a)   price rises

b)   a freeze on wages

c) high interest rates

 

The main winners of the decade:

the existing and emerging big holdings

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Types of family holdings in the 80s

1. generation: RPP generation.

Koç & Eczacıbaşı group

had roots which went back to the 1920s.  

2. generation: DP-AP generation

Sabancı group

begun their rise in the 1950s

3. generation: ANAP generation.

Anka and STFA - Building firms (early 1980s)

profited from building boom in Arab oil-producing countries used the opportunity to branch out into other sectors

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Nearly all these firms

a) family-owned

b) structured as holding companies

with their own banks, insurance, trading and production companies.

 

Age of import substitution

Imports and joint ventures with foreign firms

Main business: production of goods under license

Holdings, in times

became export-orientatedwithout halting their earlier activities

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The government tried to keep down prices for industrial goods

by encouraging competition on the home market

through the abolition of import restrictions

 

Luxury items could be freely imported

but were subject to a special tax

the tax revenue used for the housing program (toplu konut)

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Foreign investors encouraged:

1.    No longer faced discriminatory measures

 

2.    Repatriation of invested capital and the export of profits made possible

 

3.    Investors given preferential treatment regarding import duties

 

4.    In four different places (around the ports of İzmir and Mersin and near Adana) free trade zones instituted

Firms sep up factories & re-exported their products

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Government promoted

investment in infrastructure & utilities

 

1.    Telecommunications & road networks modernized

 

 

2.    Construction of natural gas pipelines from the Soviet Union

Significant impact on air pollution

replacing the inferior coal & lignite

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New constructions took place on

“build-operate-transfer” basis (yap-işlet-devret)

 

1. Foreign investor building a facility (a power plant, airport)

&

2. Operate it until its costs recovered & profit margin achieved

 

3. Facilities be handed over to government for further operation

 

This technique - used in energy & tourism sector

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The building up of a tourism industry

energetically pursued

By the late 1980s - Turkey

captured a sizeable part of Mediterranean holiday market

became a popular destination for package tours

 

The Gulf crisis - 1990-91

hit the tourist trade hard

It recovered quickly in 1992

helped this time by the civil war in the former Yugoslavia 

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Gigantic “South-est Anatolia Project”

(GAP – Güneydoğu Anadolu Projesi)

energetically pursued project

 

The plan envisaged

the building of a whole complex of dams on Fırat and Dicle including hydro electrical plants and irrigational works

 

a) to produce energy for industry

b) to irrigate 1.6 million hectares in the plain of Harran, doubling the area under cultivation

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The main part of the project

The enormous Atatürk dam on Fırat opened in 1992

 

For political reasons the project and the dam built

without financial assistance from international agencies

 

to avoid having to reach agreement with downstream countries about sharing the water

Syria and Iraq

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The stabilization program achieved many of its aims:

 

1.    Exports grew by an average % 22 yearly during the years 1980-87.

 

2.    The nature of Turkish exports changed over the decade

 

In 1979

% 60 of exports had consisted of agricultural products

In 1988

this was down to % 20

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Over the same period

the percentage of industrial products in total exports

grew to over 72

 

Among the industrial goods

textiles were of special importance

contributing over a 1/4 of the total value of the exports

 

Export destinations changed

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The early 1980s coincided with 2. boom in world oil prices

 

The Turkish exporters, supported by G,

managed to profit from

The new wealth in the Arab oil-producing countries

 A

Turkish exports to the Middle East & North Africa

exceeded those to EC

with Iran the single biggest market

 B

Thereafter, the older pattern re-established itself

E C once again main Turkish export market

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Imports went up and exceeded exports

The balance of payments gap closed

by remissions from workers in Europe

 

Political stability & attractive interest rates above the rate of inflation

encouraged workers to put their money in Turkish banks

 

High interest rates & wage freeze

combined to lower inflation - % 30 - 40 in the ½ of 80s

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Inflation rose again

it reached its pre-1980 level in 1988

Reason:

The continuing high G deficit

Causes:

 1.   Failure to curb the growth large civil service

 

2.    Inefficient taxationProfits of the industrial holdings left untouched

 

3.   Huge state industrial sector

Inefficient and largely loss-making

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The privatization program progressed very slowly

 

Reason: State industries - old-fashioned & overstaffed

The investors not interested in them

 

The abolition of a number of government monopolies:

led to a

private airline companies & television stations

 

 1989: The turning-point. 

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1.    A serious drought (dry weather) Agricultural producers hit (and exporters) hard

 

2.    Increase in interest rates – cutbacks in government investment

 

 3.    A high exchange rate for the TL. The TL’s gradual devaluation dropped behind inflation. By 1990 it was overvalued by some 40 per cent.

 

The economic policies of the 1980s greatly increased the differences between rich and poor

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1.    A new class of often very wealthy entrepreneurs arose. Fortunes made in import, export & construction

 

2.    The purchasing power - the majority of the population drastically reduced & real poverty in many homes

 

3.    A steep rise in the number of unemployed

 

Labor unrest increased - 1990-91. In January 1991 a million ad a half employees held a general strike.

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With the slowdown in the world economy at the end of the 1980s, the projected growth figures of the sixth five-year plan (1990/1994) officially adopted in 1989, proved unattainable

 

Turkey by then was much more sensitive to global economic trends because of its export-orientated economy.

 

Turkey entered a period of low growth, combined with high inflation and growing unemployment

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