Yetkin Report

  • Türkçe
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Life
  • Writers
  • Archive
  • Contact

Finance Minister: Controversial credit card fee is to fund ‘Steel Dome’

by YetkinReport / 15 October 2024, Tuesday / Published in Economy, Politics

Finance Minister Mehmet Şimşek stated that the additional fees to be collected through new proposal submitted to the parliament will be used for the construction of defence systems like Steel Dome, rather than reducing the budget deficit.

Finance Minister Mehmet Şimşek stated that the additional fees to be collected through new proposal submitted to the parliament will be used for the construction of defence systems like Steel Dome, rather than reducing the budget deficit.

The ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) has introduced a controversial bill to the parliament that would require high-limit credit card holders to pay an annual fee, aiming to generate extra resources for the Defence Industry Support Fund (SSDF).

The proposal ignited a debate about its legality and efficacy with some critics labeling it as a “thinly veiled new tax.”

Answering to the criticisms, Finance Minister Mehmet Şimşek said that the proposal aims to “provide resources for defence, not to reduce the budget deficit.”

Speaking to NTV, Şimşek emphasized:

“Our goal is clear. We’re in a challenging region and need to enhance our deterrence capabilities. There’s currently conflict in our vicinity, and defense projects require funding.”

“We’re allocating significant funds to the Defense Industry Fund, increasing it to 165 billion lira this year. This package is designed solely to provide resources for defense, not to reduce the budget deficit.”

“We plan to establish a Steel Dome to protect Turkey from external attacks. This requires advanced, expensive technologies.”

“We can’t ignore criticisms. The Parliament will consider the feedback received. While I principally disagree with off-budget funds, some are necessary.”

What is the Steel Dome?

The Steel Dome is a comprehensive air defense system approved by the Defense Industry Executive Committee, chaired by President Tayyip Erdoğan, on August 6, 2024.

Officially described as a “domestic and national” project, it aims to integrate layered air defense systems, sensors, and weapons under a network structure. This system will create a common air picture, deliver real-time information to operation centers, and provide AI-supported data to decision-makers.

In simpler terms, the project will coordinate all existing warning systems including aircraft, drones, and satellites with low and high-altitude defense missiles and fighter jets in real-time. It will be Turkey’s first comprehensive air defense system.

Estimated cost and funding

While the exact cost hasn’t been disclosed, the proposed law is expected to generate about 69.3 billion lira (approximately $1.7-1.8 billion) for the Defense Fund in 2025. If passed, about 20% (13.1 billion lira) of this amount would come from the annual 750 lira fee on credit cards with limits of 100,000 lira or more.

Other significant contributions would come from vehicle transactions (18.4 billion), land registry operations (9 billion), and tax returns (28.8 billion). The proposal also includes a 1.7 billion lira contribution from purchases of watches valued at 5,000 lira or more, excluding those for military use.

Yeni yazılardan haberdar olun! Lütfen aboneliğinizi güncelleyin.

İstenmeyen posta göndermiyoruz! Daha fazla bilgi için gizlilik politikamızı okuyun.

Aboneliğinizi onaylamak için gelen veya istenmeyen posta kutunuzu kontrol edin.

Tagged under: budget, credit card, defence, deficit, economy, fee, steel dome, tax, Turkey, Turkish economy, Türkiye

What you can read next

Erdoğan’s biggest impasse in Middle East policy
The devil lies in the details: The actual policy rate in Türkiye is not 42.5
From Israel to Russia, US: The dawn of the age of impunity
  • After İmamoğlu, Turkish opposition leader Özel faces prison threat, too3 July 2025
  • Overcoming semantics in Cyprus, establishing functionality3 July 2025
  • Can Ankara convince Hamas to a ceasefire and disarmament?1 July 2025
  • Erdogan with Trump after five years: why can they get along better now?26 June 2025
  • The Story of Iranian Women: The Resistance Never Stopped26 June 2025
  • Why did Türkiye not condemn the U.S. strike on Iran? What is going on?23 June 2025
  • What the U.S. strike on Iran might unleash — from the Gulf to Ankara23 June 2025
  • Turkish Defense Ministry on high alert against migration risk from Iran18 June 2025
  • Five Lessons from Israel’s strike on Iran, one is about Türkiye14 June 2025
  • Ankara watched Israel’s Iran attack: 200 jets in 6 waves, local support13 June 2025
Search the news archive...

Politics

Economy

Life

Writers

Archive

Türkçe

About

Impressum

FAQ

Advertising

Contact

Made with ♥ by tbtcreative.com © 2022 yetkinreport.com All rights reserved.

Yetkin Report     ·      Help     ·      User Agreement     ·      Legal

TOP