Thailand slashes rates by most in eight years
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) — Thailand's central bank slashed interest rates by the largest amount in eight years, attempting to stave off recession as the economy reels from the global downturn and a weeklong shutdown of Bangkok's airports by anti-government protesters.
The Bank of Thailand said Wednesday it had cut the key lending rate by one percentage point to 2.75 percent, its lowest level since mid-2005.
"Domestic political problems are likely to have greater repercussions on economic growth than previously assessed, particularly to confidence and tourism," assistant governor Duangmanee Vongpradhip said in a statement.
Protesters were ending their occupation of the Thai capital's international and domestic airports yesterday, but the damage to the nation's vital tourism industry was expected to be long-lasting, with more than 300,000 travellers stranded by the airport chaos.
A court on Tuesday dissolved the ruling party for vote buying, forcing Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat and other top government ministers out of office — meeting a key demand of the protesters.