Thailand unexpectedly cut its benchmark interest rate on Wednesday, in a bid to give the ailing economy a spark that the military government has been unable to provide so far. The first cut in a year in the one-day repurchase rate took it to 1.75 percent, its lowest since mid-2010.
Wednesday's move came with the Bank of Thailand's warning that this year's economic growth will be below its 4 percent forecast. It said consumer and government spending were less than expected. Thailand expanded only 0.7 percent in 2014, as the military, which seized power in May, was unable to get growth on track. The monetary policy committee - made up of three BOT officials and four outsiders - had been widely expected to keep rates unchanged. Only five of 21 analysts in a Reuters poll predicted a cut.
Since last year, BOT officials have repeatedly said that rates were already low, a cut may not boost borrowing much and that the driver of growth had to be stronger government spending. But the committee voted 4-3 for a rate cut, meaning two members changed their minds since a 5-2 vote for a hold at January's meeting. Mathee Supapongse, a BOT official who is committee secretary, said the hope is that the cut will help lift sentiment and confidence. The impact "may not be big. But the cut could help in a situation where the other mechanism is not fully working," he said.
While the May coup restored some stability to Thailand, both main growth engines - exports and consumption - have remained stalled. Exports fell in both 2014 and 2013, and the central bank only expects a 1 percent rise this year. Government spending hasn't sparked growth, as many announced infrastructure projects have not begun. Between October and February, the government disbursed only 18 pct of the total investment budget for this fiscal year.
Fiscal stimulus "will take time to materialise", the policy committee said. With the cut, Thailand joins others in Asia in easing policy this year. India has cut rates twice and China has also eased two times. Singapore, Australia and Indonesia have also eased. The central banks of New Zealand and South Korea meet on Thursday. Both are expected to hold, though Korea is seen possibly cutting in April. Economists said they don't expect further Thai cuts. ANZ called this one "token" and said potential capital flows volatility ahead of increased US interest rates make further reductions unlikely.
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