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1 Fiscal Sustainability, Inflation Targets and the Appropriate Policy Mixed
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2 Outline 1. Public Debt and Fiscal Risk Assessment 2. Fiscal Model 4. Fiscal Sustainability 3. Policy Coordination 5. Conclusion
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3 Debt of the public: Not debt of the government or any particular person Public Debt Debt burden borne by the public (taxpayers) Debt incurred and accumulated by governments over time
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4 Thailand’s Public Debt % of GDP 52. 3% 19 87 53.5% (2,869 Bil. Baht) 11.5 (614 ) 17.6 (942 ) 24.5 (1,3 13) 14. 0% 19 96
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5 62.93,4 04 3. Public debt + Off- budget expenses 53.52,8 69 1. Public debt (as of Mar 2002) - 20 Bil. B. annually 1.71031032.3 Education reform - 24 Bil. B. annually 2.31422.2 Universal health insurance (30 Baht) - FIDF 2+3 = 892 Bil. B. (Less 615 Bil. B. already included in public debt.) 5.22772.1 FIDF debt 49.22,6 71 4. Total - 2 Bil. B. annually0.2132.4 Reserve fund for GPF 9.45352. Off-budget expenses (within next 5 yrs) % of GDP Bil. Baht 13.7733Less Low-risk state enterprise debt Public Debt and Fiscal Risk Assessment
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6 Potential Liabilities Thai Asset Management Corporation (TAMC) Decentralization Excluded Liabilities Financial state enterprise debt Blanket guarantee of creditors and depositors Extra-budgetary funds Social security fund Local government
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7 Outline 1. Public Debt and Fiscal Risk Assessment 2. Fiscal Model 4. Fiscal Sustainability 3. Policy Coordination 5. Conclusion
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8 Domestic demand GDP growth Debt/GDP Government spending Monetary policy DINT GDP growth Inflation GAP PP RP GDP Output gap TAX PB Tax revenue Budget deficit RB DEBT Bond yield Debt interest C , I RD3M MLR Market rates GDP CINFEX Expectations C , I Domestic demand GG Debt Dynamics
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9 PUBLIC DEBT Central government domestic debt Debt(t) Central government foreign debt State enterprise debt Debt(t-1) RevenueInterest Tax revenue __ GDP Bond yield RP14D Expenditure Fed Funds if budget surplus if budget deficit Modelling Debt
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10 Monetary Policy Reaction Function RP14D Equilibrium rateInflation gap Output gapInflation 14-day repurchase rate is monetary policy instrument. *[Actual GDP – Potential GDP] *[Actual inflation - Target ] Monetary policy responds to deviations of GDP from potential and inflation from target. Weights ( , ) applied on gaps determine how strong interest rate adjusts to output and inflation deviations.
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11 Monetary Policy Reaction Function % Monetary policy behaves broadly in line with policy rule.
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12 Fiscal Policy Reaction Function Tax rates (VAT, personal income tax) are fiscal policy instruments. Fiscal policy responds to deviations of debt (Debt/GDP) from debt target, in terms of direction and speed. Tax-smoothing parameters ( , ) determine the rate at which tax rate changes. TAX *[Debt(t) – Target] *{[Debt(t) – Target] - [Debt(t-1) – Target(t-1)]}
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13 Outline 1. Public Debt and Fiscal Risk Assessment 2. Fiscal Model 4. Fiscal Sustainability 3. Policy Coordination 5. Conclusion
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14 Macroeconomic Stability Monetary Policy RP14D Price Stability TAX, G Fiscal Sustainability Fiscal Policy Sustainable Growth Coordination between Monetary and Fiscal Policy
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15 Coordination between Monetary and Fiscal Policy (VAT and RP14D) % % Debt stays above target. Monetary policy tighter and VAT rate increases from 7% to 11%.
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16 Coordination between Monetary and Fiscal Policy (VAT and RP14D) % Larger impact on inflation. Real GDP Growth Core Inflation
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17 Coordination between Monetary and Fiscal Policy (Personal Income Tax and RP14D) % % Debt reduced to target. Monetary policy stance remains easy, while personal income tax rate doubles.
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18 Coordination between Monetary and Fiscal Policy (Personal Income Tax and RP14D) % Stronger effect on real GDP growth. Real GDP Growth Core Inflation
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19 Macroeconomic Policy Sustainable Growth Consistency Commitment Clarity Coordination Cooperation Economic Stability Coordination between Monetary and Fiscal Policy
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20 Outline 1. Public Debt and Fiscal Risk Assessment 2. Fiscal Model 4. Fiscal Sustainability 3. Policy Coordination 5. Conclusion
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21 VATPersonnel Budget Growth < 5% Off- Budget Expenses Case 1 – Base 10 % - Case 210 % Case 310 % -- Case 47% - Scenarios for Long- term Projections
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22 Public Debt % of GDP Peak 60.9% in 2005 Peak 65.7% in 2005
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23 Interest Payments : Total Expenditure % Peak 12% in 2007 Peak 13.6% in 2007
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24 Debt Services : Total Expenditure % Peak 14.9% in 2007 Peak 16.5% in 2007
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25 Public Debt In the past 20 years and in the next 30 years 52. 3% 198 7 35. 8% 19 87 40. 8% 20 06 60. 9% 200 5 % of GDP
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26 24. 7% 19 87 17 % 19 88 12 % 200 7 14. 9% 200 7 Debt Service and Interest Payments In the past 30 years and in the next 30 years % of Total Expenditure
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27 Fiscal Sustainability Slower economic growth? Higher interest rates? Economy reaches potential in medium term Low interest rate environment
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28 Fiscal consolidation to accommodate private sector recovery. Fiscal Sustainability Reform the public sector and keep personnel budget growth below 5%. Increase VAT rate back to 10% and introduce other tax reforms. Increase efficiency in budgeting e.g. multi-year budgeting plan. Debt management strategy should be in line with bond market development plans. Closer coordination between government and state enterprises in debt management plans.
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29 Outline 1. Public Debt and Fiscal Risk Assessment 2. Fiscal Model 4. Fiscal Sustainability 3. Policy Coordination 5. Conclusion
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30 Monetary Policy Price StabilityFiscal Sustainability Fiscal Policy Sustainable Growth Economic Stability Coordination between Monetary and Fiscal Policy
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