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obverse
reverse
Rahul Ghosal

20 Bahts (Department of Revenue) – Thailand

Circulating commemorative coins
Commemoration: 80th Anniversary of the Department of Revenue
Thailand
Context
Year: 1995
Thai Year: 2538
Issuer: Thailand Issuer flag
Currency:
(since 1897)
Total mintage: 807,600
Material
Diameter: 32 mm
Weight: 15 g
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper-nickel
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
Y: #Click to copy to clipboard309
Numista: #12189
Value
Exchange value: 20 THB = $0.64

Obverse

Description:
Conjoined busts of Kings Vajiravudh and Bhumibol Adulyadej, facing half-left, with their crowned monograms beside them.

Reverse

Description:
Emblem: Phra Udendradhiraja seated on a stand, playing a three-stringed Phin lute. Background features Gajasimha tail motifs, with Thai inscriptions in a double circle above and surrounding text.
Inscription:
・ ๘๐ ปี กรมสรรพากร ๒ กันยายน ๒๕๓๘ ・

กรมสรรพากร

ประเทศไทย ๒๐ บาท
Translation:
80th Year of the Revenue Department, 2 September 1995

Revenue Department

Thailand 20 Baht
Script: Thai
Language: Thai

Edge

Reeded.

Categories

Mythology

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1995800,000
19957,600Proof

Historical background

In 1995, Thailand's currency, the baht, was at the center of a growing economic storm. Officially pegged to a basket of currencies dominated by the US dollar, the baht maintained a stable exchange rate of approximately 25 baht to the dollar. This fixed peg was a cornerstone of Thailand's economic strategy, fostering a decade of rapid export-led growth and attracting massive foreign investment, particularly into its booming real estate and financial sectors. The stability was perceived as a sign of strength, masking underlying vulnerabilities that were steadily intensifying.

Beneath the surface, however, significant imbalances were accumulating. Thailand's current account deficit had ballooned to over 8% of GDP, financed by large, short-term capital inflows. Much of this foreign money was borrowed in US dollars by Thai banks and finance companies, creating a dangerous currency mismatch. The country's export competitiveness was also eroding, partly due to the dollar-peg making Thai goods more expensive as the dollar strengthened against the yen and other regional currencies following the 1995 Plaza Accord. This export slowdown put direct pressure on the sustainability of the fixed exchange rate regime.

By the end of 1995, speculative pressures against the baht began to mount. International hedge funds and other market participants started to question the Bank of Thailand's ability to defend the peg, given the dwindling foreign exchange reserves used to maintain it. While a full-blown crisis would not erupt until July 1997, the conditions for the "Tom Yum Goong" crisis were firmly in place by 1995. The year represented the precarious calm before the storm, where the rigid currency policy, massive external debts, and an overinflated asset bubble had set the stage for a devastating financial collapse.
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