Mehmet à Âimà Âek (born 1 January 1967) is a Turkish politician and economist, who has been serving as the Minister of Treasury and Finance since 4 June 2023. He was the Deputy Prime Minister of Turkey from 24 November 2015 until the office's abolition on 9 July 2018. He previously served as the minister of finance from 2009 to 2015, in the cabinets of Prime Ministers of Recep Tayyip ErdoÃÂan and Ahmet DavutoÃÂlu. As a member of the Justice and Development Party, he was elected as a Member of Parliament for Gaziantep in the 2007 general election and for Batman in the 2011 general election.
In Prime Minister ErdoÃÂan's second cabinet (2007âÂÂ2011), à Âimà Âek became a minister of state responsible for the economy upon his election as an MP. In 2009, he became the minister of finance. He retained his position in ErdoÃÂan's third cabinet and the first cabinet of Ahmet DavutoÃÂlu, who took over as prime minister in 2014.
As finance minister, à Âimà Âek formulated fiscal policy which helped Turkey recover strongly from the 2008 financial crisis. He also undertook far reaching reforms founding the Tax Audit Board, simplifying tax regulations, enhancing taxpayersâ rights, and reducing the shadow economy.
à Âimà Âek was born to a Kurdish family in 1967, in the village of Arñca in the GercÃ¼à  District of Batman Province in Turkey. He was the youngest of eight siblings, and his mother died when he was four years of age. He attended school in three locations, Batman, Beà Âiri and Gercüà Â. Following his graduation from high school, he opened a shop for a short while but then began to study economy at the Gazi University in Ankara, later switching to politics. à Âimà Âek earned his B.Sc. in Economics from Ankara University in 1988. After working as a research assistant in the chair of international economics and economic development, he was awarded a state scholarship to the University of Exeter in the United Kingdom, where he earned his M.Phil. in Finance and Investments in 1993.
à Âimà Âek previously worked as the chief economist and strategist for the emerging Europe, the Middle East and Africa region at Merrill Lynch in London for 7 years. At this time he had a number of contacts with the Turkish authorities and the Central Bank and had worked with the AKP government on economic policy. He also served as a senior economist and bank analyst for Deutsche-Bender Securities from 1998 to 2000. à Âimà Âek spent about a year in New York City where he worked for UBS Securities in 1997. Prior to that, he was a senior economist at the U.S. Embassy in Ankara for almost four years.
Elected as an AKP Member of Parliament for Gaziantep in the 2007 general election, à Âimà Âek began his ministerial career as a Minister of State and was promoted to the post of Finance Minister in 2009.
He was nominated as one of the 500 most powerful people on the planet by Foreign Policy in 2013 and also awarded the title of "Finance Minister of the Year for Emerging Europe 2013" by Emerging Markets magazine.
Turkey experienced a reduction in economic growth in 2014, blamed by the government mainly on the problems in the Eurozone, with much of it allegedly due to political uncertainty in the country. By March 2015, the Turkish lira began losing heavy value towards the US dollar, trading at âº2.68 to US$1. The sudden decline caused the Central Bank of Turkey to make a written intervention, with the opposition criticising President Recep Tayyip ErdoÃÂan for intervening in economic affairs despite his neutral and ceremonial role. The economy was seen as so fragile due to the political uncertainty that a single speech by ErdoÃÂan caused the lira to rapidly lose its value against the dollar soon after. Investors were also concerned about the future of Deputy Prime Minister Ali Babacan, who holds responsibility for the Economy.
Despite the economic slowdown, à Âimà Âek claimed that there would be a high chance that the lira would regain its value and that inflation would fall at a fast rate in 2016. With key Islamists in government, such as Numan Kurtulmuà Â, openly critical about the independence of the Central Bank, à Âimà Âek claimed that the uncertainty caused by the potential of politicising the Central Bank meant that Turkey was unlikely to return to strong economic growth in the near future.
à Âimà Âek has since defended his record as finance minister, stating that his government was being unfairly targeted despite managing to keep its budget commitments under heavy economic pressures.
In May 2015, à Âimà Âek said that his government had reduced poverty, as well as including a statistic that showed that the percentage of the population living below $1 a day fell from 0.2% to 0% between 2002 and 2013. The tweet generated huge controversy.
In the run-up to the June 2015 general election, à Âimà Âek stated that populism by opposition parties would be the most significant threat to Turkey's economy, stating that the Republican People's Party's policy of increasing the minimum wage to âº1,500 would be devastating to workers, alleging that the extra cost of hiring workers would lead to unemployment. Commenting on other policies in the Republican People's Party (CHP) manifesto, à Âimà Âek claimed that if the party could name a source for all their spending plans, he would vote for them. The CHP subsequently gave the numerous government corruption scandals, the lavish spending on a new Presidential Palace and government waste as their funding.
In the run up to the election, à Âimà Âek ordered the release of âº1.325 billion of allowances to farmers and manufacturers.
After the 2018 election, à Âimà Âek was replaced by Erdogan with Erdogan's son in law Berat Albayrak in July 2018.
In 2019, it was revealed that à Âimà Âek had been targeted by Project Raven; a UAE clandestine surveillance and hacking operation, targeting other governments, militants and human rights activists critical of the UAE monarchy. Using a "sophisticated spying tool called Karma" they managed to hack an iPhone belonging to à Âimà Âek.
On 3 June 2023, after the re-election of Recep Tayyip ErdoÃÂan as president, à Âimà Âek was reappointed as the Minister of Treasury and Finance.
During his duty Annual inflation in Turkey surged to 69.8% last month( April 2024), up from 43.68% in April last year, according to data published by the Turkish statistical institute.
As April 21, 2025, Turkish annual consumer price inflation slowed to 38.1% in March, extending its fall from a peak of around 75% last May.
à Âimà Âek married twice. His first wife was an American woman, Annalise Granwald, with whom he married in Turkey on 20 January 1999. They divorced on 23 July 2009. He married Esra Kara on 9 January 2010. He has twin daughters and a son from his second marriage. In addition to Turkish, he speaks Kurdish and English fluently and has both British and Turkish citizenships.
<nowiki/>
|-
|-