Bangkok Post

The central bank will trim its April issuance of short-term bonds to curb speculatio­n

- CHATRUDEE THEPARAT

The types of projects to receive funding from the state’s Competitiv­eness Fund were approved yesterday by Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha.

The 10-billion-baht Competitiv­eness Fund was set up as a financial tool of the government to accelerate investment in 10 targeted industries.

The fund is expected to start operations in April after getting the nod from the Competitiv­eness Fund Policy Committee chaired by Gen Prayut.

Projects that request funding support must be eligible under the guidelines set by the committee.

“The fund will be a significan­t tool for the government to draw targeted companies to invest in Thailand,” said Nathporn Chatusripi­tak, an adviser to Prime Minister’s Office Minister Suvit Maesincee.

The government hopes the fund will allow Thailand to compete with its neighbours such as Vietnam, Malaysia and Cambodia in attracting foreign direct investment in these targeted industries.

The Competitiv­eness Fund for Target Industries Act 2017 was announced in the Royal Gazette in February.

The first meeting of the new committee yesterday agreed funding should be granted to industries that have never produced in Thailand before, such as high technology, innovation-related projects, and the 10 targeted industries.

“Because the trade and investment climate is changing quickly, the committee agreed to support industries out of the 10 targeted clusters,” Mr Nathporn said.

Companies granted funding are required to collaborat­e with educationa­l institutes on research and developmen­t.

The committee has allowed companies to obtain funding once they can prove they meet the requiremen­ts, he said.

Mr Suvit has been assigned by the committee to work with the Board of Investment (BoI) on details for the requiremen­ts. He will then propose them to Gen Prayut for his approval.

The BoI has amended the investment law to extend the corporate tax break to 13 years from eight years.

The Competitiv­eness Fund for Target Industries Act allows the government to offer up to 15 years of corporate tax breaks.

Mr Nathporn said Deputy Prime Minister Somkid Jatusripit­ak will head the team to negotiate with potential investors. Grants from the fund will not be disclosed.

The government allocated 10 billion baht in seed funding from the 2017 fiscal budget. It plans to add more budgetary expenditur­e to the fund in the future.

He said this fund is similar to strategies in other countries such as Malaysia, which has a 8.5-billion-baht fund for targeted industries, while Singapore has a 70-billion-baht fund.

 ??  ?? Nathporn: Fund a significan­t tool to attract companies
Nathporn: Fund a significan­t tool to attract companies

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand