Talking about only goods/merchandise for now:
Energy makes up around 25/193 = 13% of Turkish imports in recent years. Here it is for 2019:
View attachment 30267
https://oec.world/en/profile/country/tur
Interestingly (if you look at the other charts in website), Turkish own energy exports (mostly refined petroleum) account for paying about 30% of its energy import bill. I didn't think it would be that high.
Anyway I doubt oil/gas price increase is pushing a huge amount of import bill just by itself (given it represented ~13% basket value in 2019 and crude oil barrel price in 2019 was around $56 compared to 64$ today).
Year 2021 is not finished yet (for goods exports*) but it is likely it will be around 200 billion USD in the end I think, lets see.
Turkish Goods exports took a big decrease from 2019 to 2020 (from 182 to 168 billion according to World Bank)
So using 168 (2020) as base, there is going to be large export increases in 2021 each month.
About 6% of it comes from USD inflation and most of rest of it is volumetric increase back to 2019 level.
Getting Turkish goods exports past 200 billion dollars (esp once the USD inflation "bump" goes away) needs structural reform to increase genuine quality investment.
The AKP administration seems most reluctant to do this....and as
@Anmdt and others have said here seems more involved in cherrypicking numbers without context to try look good (rather than do good).
It will likely be left to next administration to create healthy investment culture (that needs sound judicial system in operation) and also take steps to clear out the big mess in Turkish banking sector done by current administration.
Then and only then is there steady and better realisation of existing Turkish productivity and funding streams to create further improvement in it...to double export level.
People pulling out all kind of projections about 300 or 400 billion export level being reached in 1 year time and extreme fanboying/covering for AKP admin is not an unseen phenomenon in this forum, and has already been appropriately handled by rational Turkish members here.
*Total exports include service exports too (tourism, IT, finance services etc)....this figure added about 65 billion to total (180 + 65 = 245) in 2019 and took a huge whack in 2020 (halving to about 35 billion... and total diminishing to 168 + 35 = 203)
Its (services) recovery also is happening this year, so trends (large % growth) are similar overall to goods-only figure.
But again more investment is needed to get it past the relatively stagnant high water mark turkey has been in since 2014.
The stagnancy (when looking at total goods+service exports and imports...and one can look at just goods too if they desire) can be seen by anyone....suggesting structural reform is not happening for near 7 years now to address it:
Free and open access to global development data
data.worldbank.org
Free and open access to global development data
data.worldbank.org
Goods only figures, exports and imports for Turkey:
Goods exports (BoP, current US$) - Turkiye from The World Bank: Data
data.worldbank.org
Free and open access to global development data
data.worldbank.org
But I guess people can all see the same thing and come to different opinions/conclusions about what exports and imports will be like in 1 year.
One cannot account for everyone's emotionalism/rationalism ratio.
I have already spent too much time with some Indians (in near similar fashion to what is seen here by Turkey), explaining that the fanboyism for reaching 600 billion USD level in 2021 (total exports) is not good to do as it represents about 9% increase from 2019 (of 550 billion)...and hence basically tracks the USD inflation level (i.e 600 billion today represents the same amount of "stuff" as 550 billion did in 2019)
i.e India also needs large scale reforms to sustain growth (exports or otherwise) to larger levels (though IMO Indian administration is accomplishing this to some degree compared to AKP, esp if you look at things like FDI and other investment numbers)