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IMF sees Thai growth rate at 2.9% this year

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BANGKOK: Thailand’s economic growth rate could slow to 2.9% this year and be 3% in 2020, reflecting external and domestic headwinds, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) said.

Last year’s growth for Southeast Asia’s second-biggest economy was 4.1%.

The growth projection­s came in a report released in Washington about an Article IV consultati­on in Thailand by the IMF’S executive board.

According to the report, there are different views among directors on whether Thailand has scope for further policy easing.

The IMF said it welcomed the August rate cut by the Bank of Thailand (BOT) – its first since April 2015 – and added that “going forward, a number of directors saw scope for further monetary easing to help steer inflation back to target”.

It also said “many” other directors considered the current monetary stance to be sufficient­ly accommodat­ive, and noted that monetary policy should be calibrated based on assessment of financial stability risks.

For September, Thailand reported an annual inflation rate of 0.32%.

The central bank’s target range is 1%-4%, and it has projected an 0.8% rate for 2019.

Risks to the growth outlook are tilted to the downside stemming from the impact of the global economic slowdown, current trade tensions and weak domestic demand, the IMF said.

“Directors encouraged an expansiona­ry policy mix to support domestic demand, and structural reforms to promote inclusive and sustainabl­e growth,” the fund said.

On Sept 25, the BOT left its benchmark interest rate unchanged at 1.50% after August’s surprise easing. The rate is 25 basis points above the record low.

BOT governor Veerathai Santiprabh­ob told Reuters on Friday that the bank was ready to review monetary policy if the global economic condition deteriorat­ed much further.

He said the central bank planned to further relax rules on capital outflows by the end of the year to help balance flows, as the baht climbed.

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