Distressed Financial Institutions in Thailand

Distressed Financial Institutions in Thailand

Author: International Monetary Fund

Publisher: International Monetary Fund

Published: 1989-01-01

Total Pages: 46

ISBN-13: 1451930070

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The Thai financial system faced a crisis in 1983. Weak managerial practices and an inadequate legal and regulatory framework were associated with a gradual deterioration in many financial institutions’ balance sheets; these weaknesses were brought to the fore by a sharp economic downturn in the first half of the 1980s. The Thai authorities took a number of measures to maintain stability in the financial system and to restructure insolvent financial institutions, including a substantial strengthening in the legal and regulatory framework. The crisis has impacted on the government budget deficit and caused shifts in the demand for financial aggregates and the supply of reserve money.


Finance and Development in Thailand

Finance and Development in Thailand

Author: Alek Aron Rozental

Publisher: Greenwood

Published: 1970

Total Pages: 400

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Description and analysis of the financial structure in Thailand. The author recommends modifications and reforms therein, stressing that in the future greater emphasis must be placed on developing a viable Thai manufacturing base with less stress on the financing of trade.


Banks, Financial Development and Regional Growth

Banks, Financial Development and Regional Growth

Author: Saovanee Chantapong

Publisher: Peter Lang Publishing

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 156

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This work deals with finance and banking and the linkage between finance and economic growth in Thailand. Notwithstanding a strong reserve position and macroeconomic performance between mid-1980s and mid-1990s, the Thai economy in 1997 suffered the worst twin crisis in its history. This raises many related questions. What made the favourable performance disappear within a few years? What can we do to prevent financial crises in the future? Did the expanded participation of foreign banks in the Thai banking industry after the crisis lead to efficiency gains? And more generally, are there long-run effects of financial development on real economic growth? This work is intended to answer these questions. The main finding is that the growth rates of regional real incomes in Thailand during 1981 and 2003 are significantly negatively related to the initial level of regional real incomes as expected from unconditional convergence in growth theory. Based on the concept of conditional convergence, the results show that there is a divergence of regional real incomes in Thailand during 1994 and 2003, i.e. after controlling the differences in financial development, the richer ones grew faster. Based on the Granger causality test results, there is a bi-directional causality between finance and growth. Although this work is based on the case of Thailand, international evidence and comparisons are also included.