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Thailand MPC Holds Rate at 1.0%, Lifts 2026 GDP Forecast to 2.3%

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
June 29, 2026
in Business
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Thailand MPC Holds Rate at 1.0%, Lifts 2026 GDP Forecast to 2.3%
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The MPC maintained Thailand’s policy rate at 1.0%, raised 2026 GDP forecast to 2.3%, expects inflation to ease by 2027, and will monitor inflation risks, SME debt, and FX volatility closely.

MPC Maintains Policy Rate at 1.0%

The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) unanimously voted to keep the policy rate steady at 1.0%, considering the Thai economy’s slow and uneven recovery. Retail loan growth remains weak, and SME lending continues to contract. Inflation is expected to ease in 2027 as energy and food supply pressures diminish. The MPC is monitoring cost pass-through, medium-term inflation expectations, and debt serviceability among vulnerable households and SMEs closely.

Revised Economic and Inflation Outlook

The MPC raised its 2026 GDP growth forecast to 2.3% year-on-year, driven by stronger tech and AI sector momentum, milder war impacts, and government stimulus measures addressing energy costs. Inflation is projected to peak at 4.5% in late 2026 before easing to an average of 1.4% in 2027, remaining below regional peers due to weaker wage pressure and slower growth.

Policy Implications and Future Outlook

Despite global rate hikes, Thailand’s unique inflation drivers and solid reserves support maintaining a low policy rate to balance price stability and growth. The MPC stands ready to adjust rates if risks intensify. Fiscal policy continues to play a key role in supporting growth, with targeted financial measures assisting SMEs and retail borrowers. The MPC may consider easing in 2027 if inflation declines and growth stays fragile.

Why the MPC held at 1.00%

The MPC voted unanimously to keep the policy rate at 1.00% per year, saying the level remains appropriate to support economic recovery and manage inflation risks. The hold reflects a balancing act: the committee sees growth picking up but acknowledges the recovery is still fragile and uneven.

On the inflation side, core inflation remains manageable, and the committee has not seen signs of entrenched inflation similar to those experienced in many developed economies. That gives the MPC room to stay accommodative. Meanwhile, household debt remains high at around 86% of GDP, limiting long-term purchasing power and potentially weighing on private consumption once government stimulus measures are gradually withdrawn — another reason not to tighten.

On the currency, the MPC said the baht has weakened in line with the stronger US dollar and interest-rate differentials, and the Bank of Thailand views capital movements as normal, but stands ready to manage volatility if it affects overall economic stability.

Why the GDP forecast was lifted to 2.3%

This is the more significant story. The committee upgraded its 2026 GDP growth projection to 2.3%, compared with 1.5% assessed at the April meeting. Excluding government measures, growth is expected at 1.8%.

Three factors drove the upgrade:

  1. AI and tech-cycle uplift. The improved outlook reflects the upswing in the global technology cycle, particularly AI and cloud investment by major US technology companies, which has directly boosted demand for Thai electronic products and technology components. The trend is also reflected in rising applications for Board of Investment promotion in electronics, digital industries and AI infrastructure, making exports a key growth driver.
  2. Energy cost relief. An improvement in the Middle East conflict has helped lower energy and key raw-material prices from earlier peaks, and the MPC lowered its assumption for Dubai crude oil prices to around US$90 per barrel, reducing production costs for businesses.
  3. Government stimulus. The government’s Emergency Decree borrowing of 400 billion baht to mitigate the energy crisis impact is also factored into the revised projection.

The caveat: recovery remains uneven

Despite the upgrade, the MPC still views the recovery as uneven, especially for small and medium-sized enterprises and households burdened by high debt and rising living costs. There’s also a near-term external balance risk: the MPC projects Thailand’s current account balance for 2026 to worsen to a balanced level of around $0 billion USD, down from a previous estimate of $7 billion USD surplus, attributed to higher crude oil imports and seasonal profit repatriation by multinationals — though a gradual return to surplus is expected in H2 2026 and into 2027.

The bottom line: the BOT is holding rates steady because the macro conditions don’t yet justify either a cut or a hike — inflation is benign, debt burdens are high, and the tech-export tailwind is doing much of the heavy lifting that monetary policy would otherwise need to provide.

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