ECONOMY
The economy of Thailand is export-dependent, with exports accounting
for 60% of GDP. The exchange rate has reached 37.00/usd (GDP
$7.3 trln baht) as of October 26, 2006, for a nominal GDP at
market rates of approximately US$ 200 bln. This keeps Thailand
as the 2nd largest economy in Southeast Asia, after Indonesia,
a position it has held for many years. Thailand's recovery from
the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis relied on exports, largely
on external demand from the United States and other foreign
markets. The Thaksin government took office in February 2001
with the intention of stimulating domestic demand and reducing
Thailand's reliance on foreign trade and investment. Since then,
the Thaksin administration has refined its economic message,
embracing a "dual track" economic policy that combines
domestic stimulus with Thailand's traditional promotion of open
markets and foreign investment. This set of policies are popularly
known as Thaksinomics. Weak export demand held 2001 GDP growth
to 1.9%. In 2002-3, however, domestic stimulus and export revival
fuelled a better performance, with real GDP growth at 5.3% and
6.3% respectively.
Currency Notes
Paper baht comes in denominations of 10 (brown), 20 (green),
50 (blue), 100 (red), 500 (purple) and 1000 (beige).
Currency Coins
There are 100 satang in one baht; coins include 25-satang and
50-satang pieces and baht in denominations of 1, 2, 5 and 10
About the Author: www.tourismthailand.org/
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