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Thailand's Central Bank Pushed Back On Broad Stimulus As The War Hits

Published May 14, 2026
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Higher oil prices are slowing Thailand's economy, and the government wants a big stimulus push to fight back. The central bank just said that would be the wrong move.

The Bank of Thailand warned against broad consumption stimulus as fallout from the Middle East war takes clearer shape. A wide-net response, the bank argued, would burn fiscal room without fixing the actual problem.

Why The BOT Is Saying No

Governor Vitai Ratanakorn's case is about what kind of shock this is. The current hit to Thailand is a supply-side shock - higher energy costs squeezing households and businesses - not a slump in demand.

Rate cuts and broad cash transfers are demand-side tools. Use them on a supply-side problem and you get short-term relief but no fix, while burning fiscal flexibility that may be needed later.

His pitch to the government: target the help. Send it to low-income households, small businesses, and energy-heavy sectors that have nowhere to hide.

Diesel has already moved from THB30 to THB40 per litre, and that hits a tuk-tuk driver very differently than it hits a large exporter.

Market Briefs tracks how central banks are responding to the war every weekday - five minutes a day, with a free investing masterclass when you join.

What This Means For The Government's THB400 Billion Plan

The government is planning to borrow THB400 billion through an emergency decree, and the BOT's view is that the money should lean heavily toward investment rather than relief payments.

The reasoning is simple. Cash transfers boost GDP for a quarter and then disappear, leaving an artificially high base that makes the next year's growth look weak.

Investment in roads, grids, and industry takes longer to show up, but it builds something durable. The BOT also flagged that Thailand's policy rate is already at 1%, the third lowest in the world behind Switzerland and Japan.

What To Watch

Inflation is expected to climb to 3-4% before easing late in the year. Growth is set to slow to 1.5% in 2026 and 2% in 2027, both well below earlier projections.

The BOT is in "wait and see" mode on rates, with targeted credit programs for small businesses already rolling out. The government's borrowing plan is the next big test.

How the THB400 billion gets used will matter more to investors than how much gets borrowed.

If you'd like to follow these moves every morning, join 350,000+ readers of Market Briefs - a 45-minute investing course is part of the sign-up.

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