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Thaksin Criticises Thailand's Central Bank


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Thaksin criticises central bank
The Nation

BANGKOK: -- Former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra warned Friday that a lack of cooperation between the central bank and the Finance Ministry in reining the strengthening baht could lead to a new financial crisis for Thailand.

The latest message in his Facebook account (www.facebook.com/thaksinofficial), posted Friday afternoon, said Japan could achieve a GDP growth of 3.5 per cent in the first quarter because the Bank of Japan works directly under the Japanese government.

He said a problem for Thailand was that the Bank of Thailand was independent from the Thai government, and he accused the central bank of refusing to listen to the government.

"They [the Japanese] have a holistic approach to deal with their economic problems. Their monetary policy and the fiscal policy are well united," Thaksin said.

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-- The Nation 2013-05-17

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a fiscal policy that holistically supports the clan is preferred by this monetary mogul. he should be happy, his 46 billion is worth much more when he gets it given back by the muppet regime compared to when it was seized 7 years ago by the other muppet regime...

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The keynesian idea that a strong currency is bad. Thaksin is infected with that idea too.

Upside down world.

While many countries are in a currency war by doing a race to the bottom, the countries who do not participate will perform much better on the long term. Wonder if there is anyone left who has a long term view.

Nature is not too friendly and does not allow for the survival of the weakest. Economy is in the long run the same.

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You only have to read the title and the rest is predictable. Bank of Thailand have intelligent people who act as independent checks and balances to a corrupt government. They aren't doing what the "government" (=he) wants so of course they're going to get criticised.

Can't the Nation come up with something more original or innovative. Maybe something like: "Fish Swims" or "Pope is Catholic".

Over the years I think we'd all have been better off if the newspapers just ignored the guy...

Fletch :)

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He should let his puppet sort it out

Yes he should, so now he is disrupting the authority of the PM and cabinet minister, thus undermining the denial that the government is managed by elected officials. What drives him mad however which trumps all sense of propriety is the absolute refusal to accept that there are institutions of the state which do not bow down in front of Thaksin. In addition to the army and the judiciary we can now add the Bank of Thailand which has just had its card publicly marked.
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The keynesian idea that a strong currency is bad. Thaksin is infected with that idea too.

Upside down world.

While many countries are in a currency war by doing a race to the bottom, the countries who do not participate will perform much better on the long term. Wonder if there is anyone left who has a long term view.

Nature is not too friendly and does not allow for the survival of the weakest. Economy is in the long run the same.

You missed something. The larger economies can actually control their currencies because their currencies matter in the world stage. Their actions to keep their currencies low are hurting Asia. That's deliberate, but that's life.

Thailand can't control its currency so its exports are getting screwed.

The reason it can't control its currency is because the BOT has to keep the policy rate high enough to attract bond buyers and finance Thai deficits and debt. Thailand's credit rating (BBB-) is so bad it must pay a higher interest rate than developed countries to borrow money.

So there's your rock and hard place. The baht stays high because the higher interest rates attract foreign hot money, and Thailand is caught in a trap. Will it be the government that prevails so it can spend, spend, spend, or the private sector so it can export?

I would guess that Ford and Toyota have an issue with the value of the baht now that they are manufacturing. Nissan (Datsun) was the first Japanese company to build a successful manufacturing plant in the US and it did it to avoid currency value swings. "Build where you sell, and build in local currency"

Thailand could run them right out.

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I would guess that Ford and Toyota have an issue with the value of the baht now that they are manufacturing. Nissan (Datsun) was the first Japanese company to build a successful manufacturing plant in the US and it did it to avoid currency value swings. "Build where you sell, and build in local currency"

Thailand could run them right out.

Honda recently announced they will be opening a new production facility in Thailand in 2015 investing $476,000,000
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It's reverse psychology. He is clearly very happy with how the baht is and wants it to stay that way, so he makes sure of it by giving unsolicited advice, knowing they will do exactly the opposite of what he "recommends".

Unless he know they will think that.............and do the opposite !

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I would guess that Ford and Toyota have an issue with the value of the baht now that they are manufacturing. Nissan (Datsun) was the first Japanese company to build a successful manufacturing plant in the US and it did it to avoid currency value swings. "Build where you sell, and build in local currency"

Thailand could run them right out.

Honda recently announced they will be opening a new production facility in Thailand in 2015 investing $476,000,000

Feb 6, 2013

Honda Motor Co., Japan’s third- biggest carmaker, will build a new factory in Thailand after its 2012 vehicle sales reached a record in the Southeast Asian country.

The Tokyo-based carmaker will invest about 44.6 billion yen ($476 million) to open a factory with an annual production capacity of 120,000 units, it said in a statement today. Honda plans to begin operations at the plant in 2015 and build models such as the Civic compact and Accord sedan.

Honda’s move to add capacity in Thailand comes as the automaker sold a record 171,208 units in the country last year, after recovering from the record flooding in the country that disrupted production in 2011.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-02-06/honda-to-spend-44-6-billion-yen-to-build-new-factory-in-thailand.html

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It's reverse psychology. He is clearly very happy with how the baht is and wants it to stay that way, so he makes sure of it by giving unsolicited advice, knowing they will do exactly the opposite of what he "recommends".

Unless he know they will think that.............and do the opposite !

IMHO this is not about Thaksin wanting the bank to go in a particular direction but rather Thaksin taking an opportunity to demonstrate his skills as the great helmsman. And try to bully if he can any institution that shows the slightest independence.
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Over the years I think we'd all have been better off if the newspapers just ignored the guy...

I get your point but at the end of the day, for good or for bad, he is the guy who is running the country, so how can the newspapers possibly ignore him?
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Over the years I think we'd all have been better off if the newspapers just ignored the guy...

I get your point but at the end of the day, for good or for bad, he is the guy who is running the country, so how can the newspapers possibly ignore him?
He's not running the country. He is making an effort to, but unless he is in the country and he is in place the pieces of string will not properly respond as they should. If he was running the country there wouldn't be such desperate efforts to get back and so far he has failed. As for the news, the newspapers are quite right to focus on his antics as he represents the most serious threat to the stability of the country over all others.
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Over the years I think we'd all have been better off if the newspapers just ignored the guy...

I get your point but at the end of the day, for good or for bad, he is the guy who is running the country, so how can the newspapers possibly ignore him?
He's not running the country. He is making an effort to, but unless he is in the country and he is in place the pieces of string will not properly respond as they should. If he was running the country there wouldn't be such desperate efforts to get back and so far he has failed. As for the news, the newspapers are quite right to focus on his antics as he represents the most serious threat to the stability of the country over all others.

He is running the country as much as pretty much anyone can. Of course that doesn't mean he has complete control of everything, but not many leaders do unless they are in charge of a dictatorship, and we are not quite there yet.

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Over the years I think we'd all have been better off if the newspapers just ignored the guy...

I get your point but at the end of the day, for good or for bad, he is the guy who is running the country, so how can the newspapers possibly ignore him?
He's not running the country. He is making an effort to, but unless he is in the country and he is in place the pieces of string will not properly respond as they should. If he was running the country there wouldn't be such desperate efforts to get back and so far he has failed. As for the news, the newspapers are quite right to focus on his antics as he represents the most serious threat to the stability of the country over all others.

He is running the country as much as pretty much anyone can. Of course that doesn't mean he has complete control of everything, but not many leaders do unless they are in charge of a dictatorship, and we are not quite there yet.

He is running the country, but the problem is he isn't a very good leader and his cabinet is made up of greedy corrupt inept people who only care little about Thailand and their constituents. They care so little they don't even turn up to parliament unless there is a baht in it for them, including the PM.

Edited by waza
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He is running the country as much as pretty much anyone can. Of course that doesn't mean he has complete control of everything, but not many leaders do unless they are in charge of a dictatorship, and we are not quite there yet.

He is running the country, but the problem is he isn't a very good leader and his cabinet is made up of greedy corrupt inept people who only care little about Thailand and their constituents. They care so little they don't even turn up to parliament unless there is a baht in it for them, including the PM.
If he was running the country then there would not be such situation whereby his return would lead to civil chaos. It is not possible to run a country unless you are there, on the ground. Trying to direct from afar is not the same thing. He knows it, the opposition knows it and those who are aware know that the scenario really does change if he returns. Skype doesn't cut it. He can advise, threaten, cajole, bribe, but its one very important step away.
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I would guess that Ford and Toyota have an issue with the value of the baht now that they are manufacturing. Nissan (Datsun) was the first Japanese company to build a successful manufacturing plant in the US and it did it to avoid currency value swings. "Build where you sell, and build in local currency"

Thailand could run them right out.

Honda recently announced they will be opening a new production facility in Thailand in 2015 investing $476,000,000

The facility will be used for local produce, not for export. The question is who will be buying their cars if a number of Thai exporters close door and workers are left without jobs due to strong baht?

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I would guess that Ford and Toyota have an issue with the value of the baht now that they are manufacturing. Nissan (Datsun) was the first Japanese company to build a successful manufacturing plant in the US and it did it to avoid currency value swings. "Build where you sell, and build in local currency"

Thailand could run them right out.

Honda recently announced they will be opening a new production facility in Thailand in 2015 investing $476,000,000

The facility will be used for local produce, not for export. The question is who will be buying their cars if a number of Thai exporters close door and workers are left without jobs due to strong baht?

why not approaching Honda and offer your consulting services?

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