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Thailand inflation to gradually speed up to within targeted range: central bank

    • The central bank will next review policy rates on Feb 7, when most economists expect no policy change.
    • The central bank will next review policy rates on Feb 7, when most economists expect no policy change. PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Wed, Dec 13, 2023 · 12:52 PM

    THAILAND’S inflation is forecast to gradually speed up to within the targeted range of 1 per cent to 3 per cent, the Bank of Thailand (BOT) said on Wednesday (Dec 13), with the rate expected to be low into early next year due to government subsidies but not reflecting deflation.

    Inflation expectations in the short and long-term remained well-anchored, the central bank added.

    The BOT forecast headline inflation of 1.3 per cent this year from 1.6 per cent projected earlier, while 2024 inflation was seen at 2.0 per cent, not factoring in the impact of digital wallet spending, compared with 2.6 per cent projected earlier. The BOT targets headline inflation in a range of 1 per cent to 3 per cent.

    The headline consumer price index (CPI) fell 0.44 per cent in November, though core CPI rose 0.58 per cent during the month.

    October and November headline inflation would have been +0.9 per cent and +0.7 per cent, respectively had it not been for government subsidies, BOT data showed.

    The government has cut energy and electricity prices to alleviate the cost of living.

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    The country’s economic recovery is intact but structural impediments could limit the positive impact of the global economy on exports, and credit quality must be monitored, minutes of the BOT’s Nov 29 monetary policy meeting showed on Wednesday.

    The BOT said financial conditions had tightened and it was monitoring the credit quality of small businesses and households.

    At the meeting, the monetary policy committee unanimously voted to keep its one-day repurchase interest rate unchanged at 2.50 per cent, the highest in a decade, after hiking it by 200 basis points since August last year to curb inflation.

    The committee said the policy rate was appropriate for long-term growth, but it saw urgency in providing a lift to the economy including infrastructure investment and labour upskilling programmes, the minutes showed.

    South-east Asia’s second-largest economy grew much lower than expected at 1.5 per cent in the July-September quarter from a year earlier, the slowest pace this year, on weak exports and government spending.

    Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin has said the economy is in a “crisis”.

    The central bank will next review policy rates on Feb 7, when most economists expect no policy change. REUTERS

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