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Turkey's Machine Exports Reach $13.8 Billion: Strategic Position in New Industrial Era
724FinanceKerem Tufan

According to data from the Machine Exporters Association (MAİB), the consolidated exports of the machinery manufacturing sector, including free zones, reached 13.8 billion dollars in the January-June period. During this period, the average export price per kilogram increased by 11% to 8.7 dollars. Germany remained the top export destination with 1.7 billion dollars and an 8.7% rise, followed by the United States with a 33.9% increase and 1.2 billion dollars. Italy, the United Kingdom, and Spain rounded out the top five. The product group with the highest export growth was "turbines, turbojets, and hydraulic cylinders" with a 25.6% increase, while "leather processing machines" saw a 35.3% decline.
Geopolitical Shocks Reshape Global Supply Chains
MAİB President Sevda Kayhan Yılmaz noted that geopolitical shocks, particularly the U.S.-Iran tensions, have become persistent realities affecting investment reflexes and supply strategies in global industries. These risks exacerbate existing structural challenges in European manufacturing, especially in Germany. Despite contraction and employment losses in traditional sectors, growth emerged in certain production areas driven by defense spending. Yılmaz emphasized Turkey's potential to become a strategic production hub in a "security-focused new industrial order."Defense Industry Integration and Strategic Opportunities
The new global budget and spending paradigm, targeting 5% of national income for defense and security by 2035, holds massive potential for order and investment waves in manufacturing. Turkey could serve as a critical production and logistics hub across a wide range, from armored vehicles to missiles, and from unmanned aerial vehicles to conventional weapons. Efforts to expand military production capacity offer a historic window for Turkish machinery to climb to higher-value positions in global military-industrial hierarchies.Quality Transformation for SMEs
Yılmaz highlighted that integrating into European defense supply chains requires adherence to rigorous technological disciplines and regulatory standards, which could elevate quality, traceability, cybersecurity, and production benchmarks. SMEs may face initial certification and accreditation challenges, but public support is crucial for sustainable transformation. Increased defense budgets, however, risk disrupting traditional economic balances, with the core aim being deterrence rather than conflict.Kerem Tufan: The machinery sector's export surge underscores Turkey's strengthening role in defense industry integration and global supply chains. While geopolitical risks deepen structural issues, the new budget paradigm brings growth momentum. However, SMEs may face short-term cost pressures in meeting quality standards. This trend could boost commercial credit demand and require central bank policies to navigate industrial external dependencies with greater caution.