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Thailand’s Economic Crisis in 1997

Thailand’s Economic Crisis in 1997. References Peter Warr (ed.) (2005), Thailand Beyond the Crisis Ch.1: Boom, Bust and Beyond, by Peter Warr Ch.2: Anatomy of the Thai Economic Crisis, by Ammar Siamwalla. Background.

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Thailand’s Economic Crisis in 1997

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  1. Thailand’s Economic Crisis in 1997

  2. References • Peter Warr (ed.) (2005), Thailand Beyond the Crisis • Ch.1: Boom, Bust and Beyond, by Peter Warr • Ch.2: Anatomy of the Thai Economic Crisis, by Ammar Siamwalla

  3. Background • High economic growth during 1986 – 1995 in Thailand as part of the “East Asian Miracle” • Large influx of FDI and short-term capital inflows

  4. YearEconomic Growth 1991 8.6% 1992 8.0% 1993 8.4% 1994 9.0% 1995 8.8% 1996 5.9% High economic growth in 1990s

  5. High growth of exports of manufactured products • Trade and current account deficits, but BOP surpluses •  accumulated reserves

  6. The Crisis • Bank of Thailand (BOT) in early 1990s liberalized the financial system: (to be regional financial center) • relaxed interest ceilings • reduced exchange control • open the Bangkok International Banking Facility (BIBF or offshore banking) • Non-resident baht account

  7. Foreign money at lower interest rates and fixed exchange rate, leading to heavy borrowing by private sector (both banks and non-bank), mainly short-term debts • Investment boom, and speculation in real estate and stock market • BOT failed to implement strict prudential regulation, and credit control on financial institutions

  8. Stagnant exports in 1996 • 20% growth in previous years, down to no growth • slowdown of manufactured labor-intensive exports • shook confidence among investors and creditors and “triggered” the crisis

  9. Stock prices started declining in second half of 1996, affecting finance companies revenue: first sign of “bubble burst” • In November 1996, first waves of attack on the baht by foreign speculators, hoping for baht devaluation • BOT defended the baht, losing some foreign reserves • BOT took some measures to discourage short-term capital inflow

  10. Second wave of attacks on the baht in February 1997 • BOT raised interest rates to make it more costly for speculators, but this adversely affected finance companies • Third wave of baht attacks in May 1997 prompted BOT to control baht borrowing by foreigners

  11. BOT “swap” by buying $ spot and selling it forward, showing no loss in gross reserves • Last attack on the baht in June 1997 left BOT with almost no net reserves • BOTwas forced to float the baht on July 2; its value sharply depreciated from 27 immediately to 30 baht/USD and to almost 60 baht/USD in January 1998 (managed float system)

  12. The cheaper baht made foreign debts more expensive in baht terms for both banks and nonbanks with $ debts, badly affected their balance sheets, and leading to lending reduction and financial chaos

  13. Many finance companies were “suspended”, causing panic of deposit withdrawals • BOT used the “Financial Institution Development Fund” (FIDF) to solve the problem, but failed and most finance companies were finally closed • Five banks were taken over by FIDF/BOT

  14. 91 finance companies (FCs) before 1997, lending at higher interest rates than banks and borrow by issuing promissory notes (IUOs) • March 1997: BOT asked 10 FCs to increase capital or merge • a run on them and other FCs • more loans from FIDF • June 1997: BOT suspended 16 FCs; deposits (promissory notes) replaced with extended maturity • huge run on both FCs and banks 16

  15. August 1997: BOT suspended 42 more FCs (2 July baht float hurt their balance sheets  heavy borrowing from FIDF) • December 1997: 56 FCs (out of the suspended 58) were closed permanently; their assets acquired by FIDF were transferred to the Financial Sector Restructuring, and eventually sold for much less than their face value 17

  16. For commercial banks (CBs), more serious and difficult problem due to larger size and bigger impact: one bank closed, 4 banks taken over by FIDF • Banks’ balance sheets affected by collapse in real estate + credit risks from baht depreciation (bank clients with $ debts) •  Non-performing loans (NPLs) peaked at > 40% of total loans 18

  17. Banks’ balance sheets affected by collapse in real estate + credit risks from baht depreciation (bank borrowers with $ debts) • Non-performing loans (NPLs) peaked at > 40% of total loans • banks unwilling to lend more, firms unable to borrow • “strategic NPLs” by firms in need of cash 19

  18. NPLs created a need for banks to increase their capital (equity): most banks had to rely on government funding • Solving the NPL problem: • Very high NPLs in the crisis because:  Thai banks lend on collateral (land, buildings) and personal trust (connection), hence risks could be high 20

  19. Solving the NPL problem: • Very high NPLs in the crisis because:  Thai banks lend on collateral (land, buildings) and personal trust (connection), hence risks could be high Most Thai firms are highly leveraged, relying on short-term loans from banks  In 1990s firms owed large debts in $ Threfore, both banks and firms are vulnerable to the crisis 21

  20. Solving the NPL problem: • Problem solving was difficult and slow  Outdated bankruptcy laws were amended to facilitate debt settlement: rehabilitation plan and rapid foreclosure  Shareholders and managers are same persons  ejecting owners = ejecting managers 22

  21. Solving the NPL problem: • Problem solving was difficult and slow • Thai banks prefer debt restructuring rather than debt writeoffs to avoid high burden in recapitalization  debtors recovered too slowly • Many firms had a large number of creditors (TPI had 140 creditors!) 23

  22. Solving the NPL problem: • Corporate Debt Restructuring Advisory Committee (CDRAC): public-private agreement to facilitate voluntary debt negotiations; more flexible than the Bankruptcy Court, and had some success 24

  23. Solving the NPL problem: • Thai Asset Management Corporation (TAMC), set up in 2001 to buy multi-creditor NPLs from state-owned banks, using government bonds, to facilitate debt repayment and improve banks’ financial position 25

  24. Several banks ended up with more foreign and/or government ownership; some were merged to become bigger banks

  25. Private investment down from 33% of GDP to 10% during 1996 - 98 • Sharp drops of production in most sectors, particularly finance, construction, manufacturing and some services; not much decline in agriculture • Big declines of GDP and employment • Unemployment and excess capacities

  26. Year Economic Growth 1997 -1.4% 1998 -10.5% 1999 4.4%

  27. Loans from IMF and friendly countries ($17 bill.) in late 1997 • IMF’s loan condition: strict fiscal and monetary policies worsened the situation, but later relaxed • “Contagion” effect: crisis spread to Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, and South Korea • Political repercussion: PM Chawalit gave way to Chuan

  28. Causes of the Crisis • Two groups: • External factors (3) • Domestic factors (4)

  29. External factor no. 1 Increasing trend of capital flow into emerging markets in Asia and Latin America in the 1990s • Financial liberalization by Thailand: no interest rate ceilings, Bangkok International Banking Facility (BIBF), non-resident baht account

  30. External factor no. 1 Increasing trend of capital flow into emerging markets in Asia and Latin America in the 1990s • More direct borrowing from abroad by large businesses (not through banks) • Speculative investment in stock market and real estate

  31. External factor no. 1 Increasing trend of capital flow into emerging markets in Asia and Latin America in the 1990s • Increase in international reserves, but more rapid increase in short-term debts • “Herd behavior” by international investors, and big impact on small countries

  32. External Factor no. 2 Continuous deficits in the current account, exceeding 5% of GDP before the crisis, affecting the confidence in repayment ability

  33. External factor no. 3 Stagnant exports in 1996 because: • The baht was overvalued: “real appreciation” of baht (higher price of nontraded goods to traded goods) • Slowdown in export markets for electronics • Competition from China • The era of “cheap labor” is over

  34. Domestic factor no. 1 Weakness in business fund raising • Borrowing from banks using land and buildings as collateral, heavy reliance on bank short-term loans • Banks gave credit without proper risk assessment (no analysis of feasibility and cash flow of investment projects) • “Crony capitalism”: loans to friends and people with good connection

  35. Domestic factor no. 1 Weakness in business fund raising • Firms borrowed too much relative to equity (highly leveraged) • Borrowing for speculation in stock and real estate markets • Later when land prices fell, causing problems for both creditors and debtors

  36. Domestic factor no. 2 Inappropriate macroeconomic policies • Tried to do the impossible: • fixed exchange rate • free capital movement • effective monetary policy (+sterilization = neutralizing the effect of capital inflow on money supply)

  37. Domestic factor no. 2 Inappropriate macroeconomic policies • Why not devalue the baht before the crisis? • high import content of exports • high foreign debts (by private sector) • increase import prices and inflation

  38. Domestic factor no. 2 Inappropriate macroeconomic policies • Insist on fixing the baht value, leading to • speculative attacks on the baht (with low risk of losing money) • eventual floating of the baht • Why not control capital flows, like • Malaysia?

  39. Domestic Factor no. 3 Failure in bank supervision and regulation • bank loans were main source for businesses to raise funds • banks gave loans without enough care for risks • banks were exposed to currency and maturity mismatching

  40. Domestic Factor no. 3 Failure in bank supervision and regulation • BOT policy of “no new banks, no bank failure”===>the“moral hazard” problem where banks felt that their survival was guaranteed by government

  41. Domestic Factor no. 3 Failure in bank supervision and regulation • Poor standards in loan classification, loan loss provision, and data dissemination • Widespread problem in non-performing loans (NPLs) and BOT’s weak supervision • Disunity and rivalry among BOT top management (read Nukul Commission)

  42. Domestic Factor no. 4 Weaknesses in political and social systems • politics in transition period of “democracy” with instability: within 6 years, Thailand had 4 governments, 10 finance ministers, and 4 BOT governors

  43. Domestic Factor no. 4 Weaknesses in political and social systems • Complacency in society: ignored risks in short-term financial gains, with no regard for long run sustainable economic development

  44. Situation after the crisis • From 2000, the economy started to slowly recover • 2000: 4.8% • 2001: 2.2% • 2002: 5.3% • 2003: 7.0% • 2004: 6.2% • NPLs declined and financial institutions improved

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