Transcript Thai
1997 Thai Currency Crisis
ECON 462
Professor Castillo
Spring 2011
Team 4
Abdiqani Hassan
Louisa Pangilinan
Yang Qichen
Causes of the Crisis
Team 4
Baht was pegged to the U.S. dollar
U.S. dollar appreciated, Thailand became
less competitive
Net exports declined
Thailand depreciated its currency to
promote exports
International financial market lost
confidence in Thailand
Investors sold their Thai baht
Team 4
Formation of the Trade Deficit
Causes of the Crisis - continued
Team 4
Thai baht depreciated from 25 to 55 per $1 US
dollar in the summer of 1997
Excessive Spending - both consumer and
government
Banks lent money to everyone for private real
estate and other spending
Liberalization of the financial sector
encouraged domestic companies to borrow
extensively from foreign countries
Liberalization of the Financial Sector
Again, liberalization allowed capital to flow freely
in and out of the country
Supervision was eliminated
Domestic banks were now open to outside the world
Team 4
Since the foreign interest rate was lower Thai
businesses and investors bought foreign currency
and invested in domestic
Foreign debt increased from 20 bil to 95.4 bil USD
in Nov 1997; the short-term debt accounted for
over 40% which was 2.5 times of the foreign
reserve, and accounted for over 40% of GDP
The US dollar depreciated, so there followed the
Baht the speculation; the rest is history
Team 4
Effects of Decreased National Saving
Team 4
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Thai Baht to $1 US
Thai Baht Exchange Rate (1995-1999)
55
50
45
40
35
30
25
20
More factors that contributed to the Crisis
Team 4
Real Estate Collapse
up to 15%
More than 150 Financial Institutions where
shut down like the Financial One Company
Major lay offs
Poverty rate increased
Stock market dropped 75%
Fall of the world’s demand of
semiconductors which was one of the Thai
major exports
Effects to the Aggregate Economy
Team 4
Exports declined
Cost of raw material and wages increased
Lost major customers such as the U.S. and
Europe
China emerged as an intimidating
competitor in international trade
During the Crisis
Scope of the Crisis
Team 4
Thailand experienced severe bankingfinancial sector crises that began before its
currency crisis
Pre-crisis nonperforming loan rates were
19%, or roughly 30% of GDP; in 1998, the
delinquency rate increased by 30%.
The cost of recapitalizing and restructuring
the banking system reached 35% of GDP.
Team 4
Scope of the Crisis (continued)
The CPI rose about 11% between June 1997
and 1998
Thailand’s government domestic debt
jumped to almost 10% of GDP; external
public sector rose to almost 25%
1997 Q4 RGDP dropped 4.4% vs the previous
year; the first half of 1998 dropped another
15%
Unemployment rate averaged 1% during
1994-1997; it increased to 3.4% in 1998.
Response of policy makers
Team 4
Thailand followed tight monetary policies;
it did not allow its monetary base to
expand
Monetary authorities extended enormous
credit lines to its banking systems; central
bank credit to deposit money banks rose
761%
Thai government waited 26 days to ask the
IMF for help
Response of policy makers (continued)
Team 4
IMF intervened - reversed the devaluation process
Temporarily increased interest rates to halt
currency depreciation, and reduce expenditures in
all sectors of economic system
Team 4
Effects of a Decrease in Investment Demand
Post-Crisis
The IMF’s Intervention
IMF gave a lending package of US$ 16.7 billion and
asked the Thai government to reduce financial
expenditure, increase value-added tax, and prohibit
seeking help to those problematic financial
institutions and real estates
Official foreign reserves increased to about US $14
billion by the end of March 1999------current account
turned into substantial surplus----Thailand began to
strengthen by Feb 1998
Team 4
BUT DID THAT REALLY HELP???
Bad Impact
Team 4
Thailand faced a huge cost that was severe
economic contraction---Real GDP growth declined
from the second quarter of 1997, and declined
another 8.4% in 1998.
IMF had forecasted the following: a positive real
GDP growth of 3.5%, a current account deficit of
US$ 5.3 billion, and a capital account surplus of
US$ 1.8 billion in 1998. BUT EVERYTHING
HAPPENED IN THE OPPOSITE
IMF badly misjudged the severity of the
economic downturn
What the Thai Government did
Team 4
Baht used to link to USD. Now government let
it free flow. Baht depreciated: 1USD-25 Baht
1USD-56Baht
Used tight financial and fiscal policy
Shut down problematic financial institutions,
and merged the good conditional banks to
enhance the power
Increased the supervision to the financial
institutions, established special entities, and
improved the process of auction of laws
Recovery of the Economy
Team 4
Turned production from being domestic
oriented to more export oriented
Currently, Thailand’s banking system is one of
the strongest in the region based on capital
adequacy ratio
Thai banks rely on domestic funding through
its deposit base. Lending against deposits is
about 88%; therefore, liquidity is no longer a
problem
Now considering more on reducing risk in
order to stimulate lending
What the Thai crisis has taught us
Team 4
Correctly understand financial
liberalization
Depend on the country itself at the prime
time
Enhance supervision’s fairness and
transparency
Preventing is always better than solving
problems
Team 4
Thank You