You'll get aprox 7% for your deposits in Turkey at the moment.
Any idea how to open a Turkish bank account from Ireland then? Or indeed any non EU bank account? Serious question, I'm quite interested as I have no PAYE income so an income-taxed foreign bank account would be considerably less tax than DIRT, and a decent return could make it worth the currency and institutional risk compared to Ireland, which has currency, institutional, and "bail in" risk as well as really bad rates.
You know a lot about Ireland's risks and are running a mile, but you don't seem to know a lot about Turkey's but are seemingly ready to accept them. I suggest that's not a fair comparison. Ignorance of problems doesn't mean they don't exist. Max possible yield means max possible risk. In time-honoured tradition when you get a very high yield on your cash that generally means you will lose some of your cash. Talk to people in Cyprus, Argentina, Russia.... Taking on unknown risks and then piling on top day-to-day currency risk for a currency you know nothing about. Think about that. If you can't access your account one day online, who are you going to ring and talk to in Istanbul....? Do you think they will speak English? Do you think they will go out of their way to help some guy in Ireland at the end of a line? Do you think the Turkish government will think about keeping your money safe if a political situation develops..... Also, putting money in a non-EU country doesn't mean you pay no tax. You are liable for tax. Believe me, the revenue will find you. If you are willing to take on that sort of risk I would suggest you are far far better off investing in some high-yielding equities.
In my opinion, the current deposit rates on offer by Irish banks are not close to being appropriate for the level of risk involved.
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