![[Hello Thailand] 'Thailand ready to join Asia's financial hubs'](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwimg.heraldcorp.com%2Fnews%2Fcms%2F2025%2F05%2F07%2Fnews-p.v1.20250506.3cd87a694987497cb49b2f558b68112b_T1.jpg&w=3840&q=100)
[Hello Thailand] 'Thailand ready to join Asia's financial hubs'
Deputy finance minister touts tax breaks, digital banks in push for global investors
With its geographical connectivity and sound regulatory infrastructure, Thailand is well-positioned to emerge as the financial hub of Southeast Asia, according to Deputy Minister of Finance Julapun Amornvivat.
'We believe Thailand can serve as a strong financial hub in Southeast Asia,' Amornvivat said in a recent interview with The Korea Herald. He visited Seoul late last month to attend the Ignite Thailand-Korea Business Forum, co-hosted by Herald Media Group, the Royal Thai Embassy in Korea and the Industrial Estate Authority of Thailand.
'With our central location in Southeast Asia and proximity to neighboring countries such as Laos, Myanmar and Cambodia, we have a strategic edge over others.'
While Hong Kong and Singapore currently serve as Southeast Asia's key financial hubs, Julapun emphasized that Thailand can complement their roles and contribute to the broader region.
'There are already financial centers in Singapore and Hong Kong, but Southeast Asia still has room for another hub,' he said. 'We are committed to strong regulatory practices, transparency and sound governance.'
As part of this effort, Thailand plans to establish the Office of Supervisory and Promotion of Financial Hub Business — a one-stop regulatory body designed to streamline licensing and oversight processes.
'This is a long-term vision — not something for just a year or two, but a plan spanning the next decade or more,' he said. 'In the initial phase, we'll focus only on international financial services, not domestic activities. A phased approach is essential.'
For South Korean financial firms, Thailand has long been considered a challenging market, with high entry barriers in place since the late 1990s, when many withdrew during the Asian financial crisis. But that may be changing, Amornvivat said.
'Our banking sector has been protected for the past 50 years. Now, we are opening up select areas,' he noted.
One potential area of change is the approval of digital banking licenses. Kakao Bank, a South Korean internet lender, has joined a consortium led by SCBX — a major Thai bank — to bid for a virtual banking license. If successful, the SCBX consortium is expected to launch official operations by mid-2026.
When asked about the approval timeline, Amornvivat replied, 'It is in process,' without elaborating further. However, he reaffirmed Thailand's openness to foreign capital.
'The floor is open. There will be opportunities for all types of firms to enter Thailand,' he said.
'I hope that not only Korean firms but also global players will take advantage of our tax incentives and establish a strong presence here.'
Among other growth drivers, Amornvivat highlighted the Land Bridge project and the establishment of integrated entertainment complexes.
The Land Bridge initiative aims to connect the Gulf of Thailand and the Andaman Sea through a 90-kilometer highway and railway, providing an alternative trade route to the heavily congested Strait of Malacca.
'We've received significant interest in the Land Bridge project from countries like China and across the Middle East. We haven't heard from Korea yet — but we're waiting,' he said.
Although the project is expected to cost 1 trillion baht ($30 billion), Amornvivat said he sees no financing challenges.
'A high-speed railway linking China and the Pacific Ocean is also in the works, further strengthening our position as a strategic logistics hub,' he added.
Thailand is also exploring the legalization of gambling and has designated Bangkok, Chonburi, Chiang Mai and Phuket as candidate sites for its first integrated entertainment complexes. These would feature casinos, theme parks, concert halls and even a Formula 1-grade street circuit.
'Since the announcement, we've seen strong interest from investors eager to work with the government,' Amornvivat said.
'We're confident these man-made tourist destinations will attract substantial investment and inject new energy into the tourism sector,' he added.
'These entertainment complexes are where the dreams of the Thai people can come true.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Korea Herald
an hour ago
- Korea Herald
We don't need more obejcts, just better ones: Antonio Citterio
Italian designer and architect shares his philosophy working for high-end furniture company Flexform, which launched its Seoul flagship store in May Behind companies that manage to build a legacy and maintain the quality of their products, there are often people carving out the company's identity and helping to write its history. For Italian luxury furniture company Flexform, designer and architect Antonio Citterio is one such person. Flexform was founded in 1959 by the Galimberti brothers in northern Italy, and is renowned for its high-end sofas, armchairs, tables and beds. Last month, the company launched its brand in Seoul with the Infini Cheongdam flagship store, one of a series of flagship stores opening around the world. 'Flexform's uniqueness lies in its quiet consistency. In more than four decades of collaboration, we have developed a shared language based on measured elegance, comfort and timelessness. It is a company that does not follow trends,' Citterio said in a recent interview with The Korea Herald in Seoul. The brand's signature sofas, such as Groundpiece, Soft Dream, Perry, Gregory, Asolo and Camelot, have been around for decades, and were created out of the designer's observations of people — the way they live, sit, rest and gather. 'Groundpiece, for instance, was born from observing the everyday: how a sofa isn't just for sitting, but for reading, relaxing, even working. I rethought proportions, making it lower and deeper, and introduced more informal elements,' the designer said. Since its launch in 2001, Groundpiece has become one of the most sought-after sofas by the company. Gregory, a sofa that features leather straps, is an example of visual expression of craftsmanship and quality, 'balancing between technical precision with material sensitivity,' Citterio said. 'It is never about decoration; it is about making each component meaningful. In all these projects, the goal is the same: clarity, comfort and design that stays relevant over time,' he said. The designer noted South Korea's growing appreciation for fine art and high-quality design aligns naturally with Flexform's values. 'South Korea is an extraordinary cultural landscape: design-aware and deeply connected to both tradition and innovation,' he said. 'Flexform speaks a language of restraint, continuity and subtle luxury, and I believe that resonates with the Korean sensitivity to beauty, calm and authenticity in the domestic space.' His design practice traverses different fields. An architecture graduate of Polytechnic University of Milan, he is a co-founder of ACPV Architects and was a professor of architectural design at the Mendrisio Academy of Architecture in Switzerland. In fact, the design fields he bridges share a common aim — to improve the way people live through intelligent and coherent design, according to the architect. 'In Italy, there has never been a strict separation between architecture, interior and product design. They are different scales of the same conceptual process. 'When I design a chair or a sofa, I don't isolate it from its surroundings. I think about the space it lives in, the gestures of the people who use it, and how light, proportions and relationships shape the experience,' he said. In a world flooded with designs sporting loud aesthetics and where people can easily obtain objects or furniture with a single click, Citterio's designs stay grounded by his philosophy: clarity, durability and timelessness. 'I have always thought that creativity must exist inside the industrial process, not outside of it — that is where true innovation happens. When each component of an object has meaning, structural, functional and aesthetic, the result is not just elegant, it is durable,' he said. 'I believe the world does not need more objects. It needs better ones. Better means designed with care, with awareness of how people live, and with the intention to last. I would like to be remembered for creating work that endures not through recognition or style, but through coherence,' said Citterio.


Korea Herald
5 hours ago
- Korea Herald
Foreign accessibility to Korean equity market still constrained: MSCI
South Korea has taken a series of measures to improve foreign accessibility to its equity and currency markets, but such access still remains limited, global index provider Morgan Stanley Capital International said Friday. In its 2025 market accessibility review report, MSCI said the South Korean market has implemented a series of foreign exchange market reforms, such as the extension of trading hours and the allowance of foreign players to participate in the onshore forex market. The global index provider, however, noted there is no offshore currency market and that constraints persist on the onshore currency market. "Despite these reforms, the registration process continues to face operational hurdles. Moreover, the limited usage of omnibus accounts and over-the-counter transactions has constrained the impact of related regulatory initiatives," it said. MSCI raised its rating on Korea's stock short selling to positive from negative as Seoul fully lifted its stock short selling ban, reintroduced in November 2023, in late March while taking new regulatory and technical measures aimed at enhancing oversight of the trading method. The global index provider said it will continue to monitor developments to assess the stability of the regulations over time. South Korea remained on MSCI's emerging market list last year as the country reimposed the ban on stock short selling. Every year in June, MSCI renews its watch lists of emerging markets and developed markets based on the countries' economic development, size and liquidity of equity markets, and market accessibility for foreign investors. This year's lists are due out next week. (Yonhap)


Korea Herald
5 hours ago
- Korea Herald
'Standard' of 5% GDP defense spending applies to S. Korea, Asian allies: Pentagon
The Pentagon said Thursday that South Korea and other Asian allies are also subject to the "global standard" of spending 5 percent of gross domestic product on defense, a proposal that US President Donald Trump has put forward for European allies Chief Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell made the remarks, a day after Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing that there is now a "new standard for allied defense spending that all of our allies around the world, including in Asia, should move to." South Korea's defense spending last year stood at around 2.8 percent of its GDP. "As Secretary Hegseth said today and at Shangri-La, our European allies are now setting the global standard for our alliances, especially in Asia, which is 5 percent of GDP spending on defense," Parnell said in response to a question from Yonhap News Agency. "Given the enormous military buildup of China as well as North Korea's ongoing nuclear and missile developments, it is only common sense for Asia-Pacific allies to move rapidly to match Europe's pace and level of defense spending." He added, "It is common sense because it is in our Asia-Pacific allies' own security interests, and in that of the American people's to have more balanced and fairer alliance burden-sharing with our Asian allies. And common sense is what President Trump's approach is all about." Asked to confirm if the global standard applies to South Korea as well, a Pentagon official said that he believes that interpretation was "correct." During the Shangri-La Dialogue, an annual defense forum in Singapore last month, Hegseth made an emphatic call for Indo-Pacific allies to bolster their defense spending. "It doesn't make sense for countries in Europe to do that, while key allies and partners in Asia spend less on defense in the face of an even more formidable threat, not to mention North Korea," he said during the forum. The remarks came amid speculation that Trump might call for a rise in South Korea's defense expenditures or its share of the cost for stationing the 28,500-strong US Forces Korea. The standard for the allies' defense spending comes as Hegseth has called for allies and partners to strengthen their own defense capabilities in the face of various challenges, including North Korea's nuclear program, while the Trump administration seeks to focus on countering the "pacing threat" from an assertive China. Last month, Hegseth tasked Under Secretary of Defense Elbridge Colby to draw up the 2025 National Defense Strategy to prioritize increased "burden-sharing" with allies and efforts to deter Chinese threats in the Indo-Pacific. The Pentagon chief directed that a final NDS draft be provided to him no later than Aug. 31. (Yonhap)