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    Categories: 2020

Turkey’s Demographics Defy Erdoğan’s Designs

Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies


By Burak Bekdil 



BESA Center Perspectives Paper No. 1,636, 

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: Only 12% of Turks say they trust Islamic clerics,
and more and more young Turks are unhappy at religious school. As high
a proportion as 60.5% of pro-Erdoğan youths say they would rather live
in Switzerland with half the salary they could have earned in Saudi
Arabia. The fertility rate has fallen to 1.99—below the 2.1 rate
required to sustain existing population figures. Despite Erdoğan’s
unchallenged popularity, power, and authoritarian rule, Turkey is
evolving demographically in a way that defies the dictates of Islamist
social engineering.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has not lost a single election,
including municipal elections and referenda, since his AKP (Justice
and Development) party came to power in November 2002. This is
ostensibly a flawless performance for a politician. But Erdoğan wants
more than just to win one election after another. In 2012 he declared
his political mission to be “raising devout generations.” That is a
far more ambitious mission than just winning at the ballot box.

Credible recent surveys indicate that Erdoğan’s 18-year reign has
failed to achieve his broader political mission.

Optimar, a Turkish pollster, found that in 2017, 99% of Turks
identified as Muslim, but in 2019, that figure had slid to 89.5%.
Konda, another pollster, found in 2019 that Turkish youths were less
likely than the wider population to call themselves “religious
conservative.” They were also less likely to fast, pray regularly, or,
if female, cover their hair.

Another survey, part of OECD’s Programme for International Student
Assessment, revealed that 54% of imam school students do not feel they
belong at their school, compared to 27.5%-29.1% of students at
non-religious schools. Most embarrassing for Islamists, perhaps, were
the findings of a survey by Ipsos, an international pollster. Ipsos
found that only 12% of Turks trust Islamic clerics, the worst score
after politicians (who are trusted by 11%).

A more recent survey found that even conservative, pro-Erdoğan youths
have no faith in either their own country or other Islamic countries.
SODEV, a Turkish foundation, asked young people between the ages of 15
and 25 whether they would live abroad if given the chance. Almost half
(47.3%) of those youths who said they supported Erdoğan’s AKP said
they preferred to live abroad. “That means half of Erdoğan’s youth
have no faith in Turkey’s future,” wrote Akif Beki, a former spokesman
for Erdoğan and a columnist.

SODEV’s “Youth Research” was not encouraging for Erdoğan and
ideologues who advocate authoritarian, top-down social engineering
aimed at producing Islamist youth. SODEV asked pro-Erdoğan (pro-AKP)
young people whether they would rather live in Switzerland on $5,000
per month or in Saudi Arabia on $10,000 per month. As many as 60.5% of
them said they would prefer Switzerland.

Why would fiercely nationalist, religiously conservative, pro-Erdoğan
young Turks prefer to live in a Christian European country? Haven’t
they been listening to Erdoğan’s aggressive anti-Western rhetoric for
the past 18 years? SODEV’s survey provides an answer to that question
too. According to the study, 70.3% of respondents think a talented
young Turk would never be able to promote him- or herself
professionally in Turkey without [political/bureaucratic]
“connections”—that is, without the help of nepotism. And only 30% of
them think they can freely express their opinions on social media.

When asked to name the most significant idea in life, 49.8% cited
“national values” and 45.7% cited “religious values.” But 68.3% cited
“freedom to express one’s opinion.” Apparently, Turkey’s lack of
freedom, equal opportunity, and social mobility tells young Turks that
they would be better off in a Christian country. “That’s because young
Turks, including [those who are] pro-Erdoğan, know they could
fearlessly express their opinions in Switzerland…that they could have
a [successful] professional career without resorting to nepotism and
that they would not face police interrogation just because they
expressed their opinions,” commented columnist Elif Çakır.

Another of Erdoğan’s social engineering failures is the greying of
Turkey. Since 2008, the Islamist-populist leader has repeatedly urged
Turkish families to have at least three children—“four or five if
possible.” Without naming names, Erdogan justified this quest as a
defense against “those [foreign plotters who] want to annihilate our
nation.”

Despite Erdoğan’s baby boom campaign, the number of healthy births in
Turkey dropped by 3.6% to 1.248 million in 2018 versus 1.295 million
in 2017. The overall fertility rate fell to 1.99 from 2.07, meaning
Turkey is now reproducing below the 2.1 rate required to maintain the
population at current levels.

Turkey’s demographic evolution defies the dictates of Erdoğan’s
Islamist social engineering despite his unchallenged popularity,
power, and authoritarian rule. Turkish families ignore his instruction
to have at least three children, and his younger supporters are ready
to pack up and move to a Christian country.

This is not the demographic picture Erdoğan dreamed of, but it is the
natural outcome of his democratic shortcomings. As I have suggested
before, “Perhaps Erdoğan’s best service to his country is to show
young Turks what it actually means to live under an Islamist regime.”


Burak Bekdil is an Ankara-based columnist. He regularly writes for the
Gatestone Institute and Defense News and is a fellow at the Middle
East Forum.


 

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