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Thailand Seeks New Economic Chiefs During Worst Crisis

Thailand is replacing the top two officials steering the economy through its worst crisis ever.

Thailand Seeks New Economic Chiefs During Worst Crisis
Police officers wearing protective masks and clothing conduct temperature checks at a checkpoint on Chaengwattana Road during a partial lockdown imposed due to the coronavirus in Bangkok, Thailand. (Photographer: Andre Malerba/Bloomberg)

Thailand is replacing the top two officials steering the economy through its worst crisis ever, injecting more uncertainty into the policy outlook.

Finance Minister Uttama Savanayana resigned July 16 ahead of a Cabinet reshuffle, with Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-Ocha saying he’ll announce a likely replacement by next month. At the Bank of Thailand, the search for a successor to Governor Veerathai Santiprabhob is entering the final stages, although the Cabinet changes may delay that process. Veerathai, 50, has declined to seek a new term when his current one ends in September.

The upheaval comes at a time of heightened uncertainty in the global economy and a slump in export- and tourism-reliant Thailand that’s among the worst in Asia. The finance minister and central bank governor helped shape a 1.9 trillion-baht ($60 billion) stimulus package that’s meant to curb the economic fallout from the pandemic, and investors want to see those funds put to work.

“We are in a crucial time of transition from lockdown to resumption of business, so the continuation of key policies are very important to help the economy hit by the outbreak,” said Vasin Vanichvoranun, chairman of Kasikorn Asset Management Co. in Bangkok. The sooner the replacements are found “the better,” he said.

Somkid Jatusripitak, who was deputy prime minister in charge of the economy, also resigned alongside Uttama last week, another blow to the government’s management team.

Military Leader

Prayuth is set to make his first Cabinet changes since his victory in last year’s disputed election. A former army chief, he led a military coup in 2014 and ruled as the head of a junta for five years before returning at the head of a multi-party coalition after the vote. Uttama was recently replaced as leader of the largest political party in the coalition.

Youth-led protests have also resumed against Prayuth. Thousands of demonstrators gathered in Bangkok and a few other cities over the weekend to demand the government’s resignation, drawing the biggest crowds since the lockdown began in March.

The political shake-up couldn’t have come at a worse time for the economy. The central bank expects gross domestic product to shrink 8.1% this year, the biggest decline on record and more dire than official forecasts for any other Asian nation. The central bank also is dealing with currency turmoil that’s undermining exports, and is examining new ways of supporting the economy as it runs out of conventional policy space.

Veerathai said at a seminar Monday that it will take about two years for the economy to return to its pre-Covid levels, based on the assumption that the outbreak can be kept under control. Rather than a V-shaped recovery, he sees the trajectory more like a “check mark with a long tail.”

“I am concerned the most about employment as tourism and related businesses employ lots of people,” the governor said. “When the outbreak hit, so many people lost their jobs” and many probably won’t get them back, he said.

After sharp gains since April, the baht has slid steadily this month amid weaker global sentiment. It fell 0.4% to 31.786 against the dollar as of 11:44 a.m. in Bangkok on Monday, taking its decline since the beginning of July to 2.8%, the worst performer in Asia after Indonesia’s rupiah.

Baht weakness illustrates market worries about the pandemic and the political upheaval, with the uncertainty weighing on financial market, consumer and business sentiment, said Tim Leelahaphan, an economist at Standard Chartered Plc in Bangkok.

The finance minister post is a key one market participants are watching. Prayuth said last week he’s waiting to hear from potential successors he has approached -- some of whom are “outsiders” without political backgrounds.

One of the candidates he approached is a well-known banker, who has emerged as the possible front-runner for the post:

Predee Daochai, 61
  • Co-president of Kasikornbank Pcl, one of the nation’s largest lenders
  • Chairman of Thai Bankers Association
  • Has a graduate law degree from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  • Former member of the National Legislative Assembly

Radhika Rao, an economist at DBS Group Holdings Ltd. in Singapore, said the market is looking for “seasoned players” to take over.

“With the broad fiscal stimulus framework to fight the pandemic in place, the incoming finance minister will likely prioritize stabilizing growth through higher government support and demand, as external sectors require global recovery to also get underway as well as international borders to reopen,” she said.

The new finance minister will pick the next central bank governor from a shortlist of candidates. A selection committee received six applications for the position, including from two current deputy governors.

The likely front-runner, according to media reports, is a current member of the bank’s Monetary Policy Committee:

Setthaput Suthiwart-Narueput, 55
  • He’s one of four external MPC members, and has been on the committee since 2014
  • A member of Prayuth’s economic advisory team
  • Holds a master’s and doctorate degrees in economics from Yale University
  • Prior roles include World Bank senior economist, president of SCB Asset Management Co.

Investors are heartened by the fact that the likely replacements are well-known and qualified, but expect the road ahead to be a difficult one.

“What the newcomers need to deal with are real tough jobs,” said Win Phromphaet, chief investment officer of Principal Asset Management Co. in Bangkok. “The central bank has limited policy space and they will need to handle rising bad debts going forward, while the task of the finance minister, who will need to boost the economy after Covid-19, is also very difficult.”

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.