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The Monetary Crisis of the Thai Baht

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Point of origin: beginning of the 80's, stock-market crash and economic crisis ... Opening of the bond and stock market for foreign investors ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Monetary Crisis of the Thai Baht


1
The Monetary Crisis of the Thai Baht
  • Macroeconomics II
  • SoSe 2004
  • Prof. Dr. Paul Bernd Spahn
  • Dipl. Volkswirt Jan Werner
  • Saskia Scarbrough, Candace Toussaint,
  • Stefan Khanna, Sha He

2
Contents
  1. Introduction
  2. The Crisis Overview
  3. Background
  4. Stabilization Strategy
  5. Aftermath On the road to recovery
  6. Summary

3
Introduction
  • The Bahtulism epidemic
  • 20 loss of value by the Baht to US dollar in
    less than 1 week
  • Asian contagion spread rapidly across Asia
  • Stock prices fell
  • Real estate prices plummeted
  • Non-repayment of loans in Yen, Marks and Dollar
    by banks and corporations
  • Local currencies across Asia went into free fall,
    for example
  • Malaysian Ringgit
  • Indonesian Rupiah
  • Phillipine Peso

4
Thai dies Bangkok SET index
5
Background (1)
  • The economic boom
  • Point of origin beginning of the 80s,
    stock-market crash and economic crisis
  • Japans capital inflows prevent an IMF rescue
  • Thailand becomes an important exporter of
    manufactured goods
  • Over 2 decades economic growth averaging 6.7
  • 2. Endangered cyclical downturn
  • Huge demand for capital
  • Alternative countries for production (e.g.
    Vietnam, China) due to inland wage increases

6
Background (2)
  • Regulation vs. Liberalization
  • Agreement with GATT and WTO ? Thailand opens
    markets
  • Milestone decisions Lifting of controls on all
    foreign exchange transactions on the current
    account
  • Opening of the Bangkok International Banking
    Facility (BIBF)
  • 3-year-plan (1990-1992) introduced to improve
    financial system
  • Tight coupling of the Baht with the USD
  • Opening of the bond and stock market for foreign
    investors
  • Development strategy emphasizes role of private
    sector

7
Background (3)
  • 4. Effects of Liberalization
  • Virtuous circle high growth rates attract new
    capital inflows thereby creating higher growth in
    economy and export
  • Thai banks lend foreign borrowed money to
    domestic banks
  • Oversupply in construction sector 50 of loans
    are non-performing banks having trouble to
    service their foreign debt
  • 1994 Depreciation of Chinese Yuan by one third
    reduction in Thai competitiveness
  • 1995 US rises against most currencies and so
    does the Baht
  • Growth sinks from 26 in 1995 to 1 in 1996

8
The Crisis Overview (1)
  • Macroeconomic landscape
  • Financial liberalization and deregulation since
    early 1990s
  • Strong capital inflows
  • Unhedged foreign currency borrowing
  • Excessive reliance on short-term external debt
  • Overvalued currency
  • The Bahts peg to strengthening US dollar arose
    suspicion of being overvalued
  • Link between currencies looked unreasonable due
    to high current account shortfalls, inflation
    asset bubbles
  • Speculative runs triggered against the Baht by
    currency traders hoping to profit from a
    devaluation

9
The Crisis Overview (2)
  • Political instabilities
  • Over investment in unproductive sectors,
    especially in property
  • Misallocation of funds in uneconomic factories
    (e.g. By cronyism, corruption)
  • rotten pseudo-democracy (vote-buying)
  • Waning investor confidence
  • Attack on Baht by hedge fund operators such as
    George Soros and Julian Robertson intensified
    (early 1997)
  • Increasing number of non-performing loans
  • Many investors exchanged Baht for dollars
    (fearing instability)
  • Massive sell-off of Baht by companies operating
    in the region

10
The Crisis Overview (3)
  • Government intervention
  • Interest rate increases. For offshore borrowers
    more than 1,300 to deter speculators (May 1997)
  • Suspension of 16 finance companies
  • Billions of dollars invested (mostly on forward
    contracts) trying to defend currency
  • Central bank finally depletes resources in the
    process
  • The bursting of the bubble
  • Devaluation and floating of the Baht on July 2nd
    1997
  • Foreign investors fled
  • Flurry of loan defaults by many businesses
  • Many banks on the brink of bankruptcy

11
Tumbling Baht against the dollar
12
Sink or swim Currencies against the dollar
13
Stabilization Strategy (1)
  • (under IMF consultation)
  • Short-term goals
  • restoring of market confidence stability
  • stopping massive capital flight due to the Baht
    devaluation
  • Long-term goals
  • macroeconomic stability
  • implementation of key structural reforms
  • Recapitalization of the banking system

14
Stabilization Strategy (2)
  • 1st Letter of Intent (14th August 1997)
  • Fiscal side Fiscal austerity (tax increases and
    expenditure cut to offset the costs of financial
    restructuring)
  • Monetary side
  • Stringent monetary policy to stabilize the
    exchange rate (money growth declined)
  • BUT
  • Slowdown of the economy led to a large revenue
    shortfall

15
Stabilization Strategy (3)
  • 2nd Letter of Intent (November 1997 - most
    difficult time, baht reached 54 to a dollar)
  • Further cuts in government expenditures
  • Minor tax increases
  • More stringent monetary policy, with M2 growth to
    be kept at 1 per cent
  • 3rd Letter of Intent (24th February 1998)
  • to achieve a comfortable current surplus, whose
    attainment was now mentioned as allowing fiscal
    relaxation.
  • 4th Letter of Intent (26th May 1998)
  • Change in IMF policy
  • Deficit spending as a stabilization strategy

16
Aftermath On the road to recovery (1)
  • Closure of 10 finance companies at the start of
    the crisis, aimed at creating confidence towards
    the still existing finance companies
  • The opposite was the case, the closure was
    interpreted as proof for a desolate finance
    sector
  • Impossible Trinity
  • capital mobility, fixed exchange rates,
    self-contained monetary policy cant be realized
    simultaneously
  • In the early stages
  • Call for budget surplus and a restrictive money
    policy
  • Government intervention in the weakest banks

17
Aftermath On the road to recovery (2)
  • Change in Policy since beginning 1998
  • Fiscal policy shifts targeting budget deficits
  • Focus privatization in the intervened banks,
    sale of assets from finance companies,
    restructuring corporate debt strengthening the
    institutional framework
  • Foreclosure procedures introduced and foreign
    investment restrictions are reduced
  • High interest rates are reduced by mid-1998.
  • Non-performing loans remain on a high level.
  • Positive growth in late 1998 (GDP growthgt4 in
    1999)

18
Aftermath On the road to recovery (3)
  • Foreign-exchange reserves remain 32-34 billion
  • Strenghtening of both the Central Bank the
    financial and corporate sectors
  • The established Chiang Mai-Initiative among the
    ASEAN members, China, Korea and Japan is an
    important example for the new membership in that
    region. Swap-retail deals offered
  • IMF criticized Greater interest in safeguarding
    foreign creditors, than avoiding collapse in Asia

19
Impact
20
Summary
  • Until the crash of 1997, the Thai economy had
    performed exceptionally well. The consequent
    crisis therefore raised many questions as to the
    root of the problems. Was it purely speculation,
    economic factors or a combination of both, that
    led to the dismay ?
  • Besides all criticism towards the IMF policy one
    can conclude that the reason for the crisis has
    not been financial liberalization, but the
    inadequacy of regulation.
  • In the end, transparency leads to increased
    confidence in the financial system and reassures
    future foreign investments and decreases the
    probability of a new crisis.
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