“Every day, the money is melting,” said Mehmet Kaya, a car mechanic in Adana.
The price of motor oil had gone up four times since the crisis began in 2018, he said, and prices had also risen for everything else he needed for his shop. At home, the amount of money required last year to fill his car’s trunk with groceries now bought only two bags.
“I am very depressed, pensive, stressed out,” said Mr. Kaya, 40.
In speeches and interviews, Mr. Erdogan has described low interest rates as part of a plan to foster economic growth by stimulating manufacturing and making Turkish products more attractive for export. He has blamed the country’s economic woes on unspecified foreign forces while suggesting that Turkish families are in fact better off than people in wealthier countries.
Mr. Erdogan has tried to play down inflation, saying it is not a crippling economic threat and vowing that the government would take action against exorbitant price increases.
“We expect from our citizens a bit more patience and strength,” he said in a televised statement last month.
But in the U.S., inflation has fallen to under 8 percent annually, after interest rate increases, while yearly inflation in Turkey is more than 10 times that rate.