Thai central bank holds key rate at record low as outbreak eases
[BANGKOK] Thailand's central bank held its key interest rate unchanged as the country's Covid-19 outbreak eases, allowing the government to loosen movement restrictions to boost local demand and tourism.
The Bank of Thailand's rate setting committee voted unanimously on Wednesday to hold the one-day repurchase rate at a record-low 0.5 per cent for an 11th straight meeting, as 19 of 22 economists in a Bloomberg survey predicted. The other three expected a 25-basis point cut.
Thailand is joining other Southeast Asian countries in slowly easing pandemic restrictions as it balances virus-containment measures with steps to revive the economy. The government has promoted a "living with Covid-19" strategy and ramped up its vaccination campaign, followed by a decision Monday to cut the quarantine period, shorten the nightly curfew and allow more businesses to reopen.
Thailand reported 9,489 new Covid-19 cases Tuesday, its lowest tally since July 15. About 33 per cent of the population has been vaccinated, up from 18 per cent a month ago.
Earlier this month, the central bank relaxed rules for its low-interest loan programme and boosted incentives for banks to encourage debt restructuring. The government raised the public debt-to-GDP ratio to 70 per cent from 60 per cent from Sept 20 to allow for higher state borrowing to fight the outbreak.
The Cabinet also approved a public debt management plan for the fiscal year starting Oct 1, which includes US$39.7 billion in new borrowing mainly to finance the budget deficit, government investments and virus-related projects.
BLOOMBERG
Decoding Asia newsletter: your guide to navigating Asia in a new global order. Sign up here to get Decoding Asia newsletter. Delivered to your inbox. Free.
Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services
TRENDING NOW
Malaysian tycoon Vincent Tan’s sell-downs point to pruning rather than an exit plan
Asean must retain more value as its digital economy races towards US$2 trillion: Indonesian minister
Ohmyhome Ltd sells real estate business for token US$1 due to poor business and continued losses
Could Ohmyhome face Nasdaq delisting after selling its core unit for US$1? Experts weigh in