Turkey's annual consumer inflation rate dropped slightly to 32.11% in June from 32.61% in May, according to TurkStat. However, food inflation remains extremely high at 34.86%, with housing, utilities, and transportation also seeing significant price increases. While transportation costs decreased marginally, overall inflation continues to place financial strain on households, particularly retirees. Pension adjustments were announced, with retirees receiving a 17.76% increase, but many still struggle financially, with nearly 90% reporting they need to work to avoid poverty.
Lecture du biais (Centre): The article presents factual economic data without overt ideological slant, focusing on objective inflation metrics and their impact on citizens. It reports on government actions (pension adjustments) and societal outcomes (retiree poverty) without taking a clear partisan stance. The framing remains
Pourquoi ces scores (Factualité 85 · Objectivité 80): Factuality is high as the article cites TurkStat data and provides specific inflation figures. It reports on food inflation and categorizes price changes accurately. Objectivity is good but slightly lower due to mention of pension adjustments and poverty statistics, which may imply a social concern





