Thailand - The Currency Crisis and Beyond |
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Thailand has advantages of its own: it may be small, but it is a member of the ASEAN Free Trade Area, a trade block of ten South-East Asian countries with a total population of over 500m. That makes it a bigger market than the whole of Latin America. - The Economist, 28th February 2002. IntroductionIn 1992, a military strongman's attempt to suppress student demonstrations and install himself as prime minister triggered off a campaign for political reform. A new constitution was drafted in 1997, just as Thailand's economy collapsed.
1] In July 1997, Thailand devalued its currency, triggering the turmoil that roiled global capital markets for more than a year. Commodity prices plunged, hammering resource-based currencies like the Canadian, Australian and New Zealand dollars. Bond yields in emerging nations soared, while equity markets tanked. In August 1998 Russia defaulted on its debt, spurring a massive capital flight towards liquid, low-risk assets. Not until the Federal Reserve reduced interest rates in the fall of 1998 did the global turmoil subside.
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