Thailand’s government, central bank to keep inflation target for 2025
Finance minister insists that the real issue is not the country’s inflation target, but too low inflation, low investment and household debt
THAILAND’S government has agreed with the country’s central bank to maintain the current 1 to 3 per cent inflation target for 2025, in return for assurances that the bank will support its fiscal policy and help jumpstart growth, the finance minister said on Tuesday (Oct 29).
The central bank has insisted the present target, in place since 2020, has worked well for the economy, but the Thai government wants higher prices to boost economic activity amid tepid growth that has lagged regional peers.
The meeting between Finance Minister Pichai Chunhavajira and Bank of Thailand (BOT) chief Sethaput Suthiwartnarueput came after months of intense government pressure to cut interest rates and align with fiscal policy aimed at stimulating the economy.
Pichai said the BOT should support the government’s efforts on the economy and consider inflation and foreign exchange when conducting monetary policy.
“I can accept the inflation target of 1 to 3 per cent, but there must be measures to support growth and bring actual inflation up to an appropriate point, close to or at 2 per cent,” he added.
The BOT declined to comment on the meeting.
Pichai said the real problem was not the inflation target, but debt, low investment and too low inflation, he said, adding the central bank must submit policy guidelines to him again.
The government had been pushing all year for a rate cut, blaming rates for suppressing activity and curbing its efforts to boost growth.
The BOT had long resisted the pressure, including from several major business groups, but unexpectedly cut its key rate by 25 basis points to 2.25 per cent on Oct 16 – the first reduction since 2020. The next policy review is on Dec 18.
The finance minister said the central bank should also ensure that the baht currency supports exports, adding low interest rates would help the economy, investment and debt.
Seeking influence
The government will in two weeks introduce more measures to address household debt, he noted, which was 16.3 trillion baht (S$640.3 billion), or 89.6 per cent of gross domestic product – among the highest in Asia.
Thailand’s government has sought to assert its influence on the Thai central bank by nominating a ruling party loyalist and critic of the BOT governor for the post of board chair.
Ahead of Tuesday’s meeting, Pichai had said inflation would miss the target this year, as average annual headline inflation was just 0.2 per cent in the first nine months of 2024.
The central bank has long maintained that it is structural issues that are weighing most on growth.
BOT deputy governor Piti Disyatat told Reuters last week that inflation was low and well-anchored, with no risk of deflation, while the economy was converging to trend growth.
The current policy stance was well-balanced, and the recent rate cut was a “recalibration”, not the start of an easing cycle, he said.
The central expects headline inflation, at 0.61 per cent in September, to return to target late this year and predicts average inflation at 0.5 per cent this year and 1.2 per cent in 2025.
This month, BOT raised its 2024 GDP growth forecast to 2.7 per cent from 2.6 per cent, but trimmed its 2025 growth outlook to 2.9 per cent from 3 per cent. The economy expanded just 1.9 per cent last year. REUTERS
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