The baht (Thai: บาท, sign: ฿; code: THB) is the currency of Thailand. It is subdivided into 100 satang (สตางค์). The issuance of currency is the responsibility of the Bank of Thailand.
| Thai baht | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| บาทไทย (Thai) | |||||
|
|||||
| ISO 4217 Code | THB | ||||
| User(s) | |||||
| Inflation | 5.1% | ||||
| Source | The World Factbook, 2006 est. | ||||
| Subunit | |||||
| 1/100 | satang | ||||
| Symbol | ฿ | ||||
| Coins | |||||
| Freq. used | 25, 50 satang, ฿1, ฿2, ฿5, ฿10 baht | ||||
| Rarely used | 1, 5, 10 satang | ||||
| Banknotes | |||||
| Freq. used | ฿20, ฿50, ฿100, ฿500, ฿1000 | ||||
| Rarely used | ฿10 | ||||
| Central bank | Bank of Thailand | ||||
| Website | www.bot.or.th | ||||
| Mint | The Royal Thai Mint | ||||
| Website | www.trd.mof.go.th | ||||
The currency was originally known as the tical; this name was used in the English language text on banknotes until 1925. However, the name baht was established as the Thai name by the 19th century. Both tical and baht were originally units of weight and coins were issued in both silver and gold denominated by their weight in baht and its fractions and multiples.
Until 1897, the baht was subdivided into 8 fuang (เฟือง), each of 8 ath (อัฐ). Other denominations in use were:
| Denomination | Thai | Value | Alternate meaning |
| bia | เบี้ย | 1⁄6400 Baht | cowrie; a very small amount of money; a counter used in gambling |
| solot | โสฬส or โสฬศ | 1⁄128 Baht | |
| att or ath | อัฐ | 1⁄64 Baht | |
| sio or py | เสี้ยว เซี่ยว or ไพ | 1⁄32 Baht | a quarter (feuang) |
| sik | ซีก or สิ้ก | 1⁄16 Baht | a section; a half (feuang) |
| feuang | เฟื้อง | 1⁄8 Baht | |
| salung | สลึง | 1⁄4 Baht | a quarter (baht) |
| mayon | มายน or มะยง | 1⁄2 Baht | |
| baht | บาท | 1 Baht | 1 tical, from Portuguese, from Malay tikal |
| tamleung (of silver) | ตำลึง (หน่วยเงิน) | 4 baht | a gourd; weight of silver equal to four baht, or ~60 grams |
| chang | ชั่ง | 20 tamleung or 80 baht | a catty ~1200 gram weight of silver; as a metric unit of weight, chang luang ชั่งหลวง = 600 grams |
| hap | หาบ | 80 chang or 6400 baht | ~96 kg of silver, roughly equivalent to the monetary talent; from the verb/noun (carry) a load (suspended at each end of a pole across the shoulder); as a metric unit of weight, hap luang หาบหลวง = ุ60 kg |
The decimal system devised by Prince Mahisorn, in which 1 baht = 100 satang, was introduced by king Chulalongkorn in 1897. However, coins denominated in the old units were issued until 1910. One hangover from the pre-decimalization system: the 25 satang (¼ baht) is still colloquially called a salueng or salung (สลึง). It is occasionally used for amounts not exceeding 10 salueng or 2.50 baht. A 25-satang coin is also sometimes called salueng coin (เหรียญสลึง, pronounced 'rian salueng').
Until November 27, 1902, the tical was fixed on a purely silver basis, with 15 grams of silver to the baht. This caused the value of the currency to vary relative to currencies on a gold standard. In 1857, the values of certain foreign silver coins were fixed in law, with the 1 baht = 0.6 Straits dollar and 5 baht = 7 Indian rupees. Before 1880 the exchange rate was fixed at eight baht per pound sterling, falling to ten to the pound during the 1880s.
In 1902, the government began to increase the value of the baht by following all increases in the value of silver against gold but not reducing it when the silver price fell. Beginning at 21.75 baht = 1 British pound, the currency rose in value until, in 1908, a fixed peg to the British pound was established of 13 baht = 1 pound. This was revised to 12 baht in 1919 and then, after a period of instability, to 11 baht in 1923. During the Second World War, the baht was fixed at a value of 1 Japanese yen.
From 1956 until 1973, the baht was pegged to the U.S. dollar at an exchange rate of 20.8 baht = 1 dollar and at 20 baht = 1 dollar until 1978. A strengthening US economy caused Thailand to re-peg its currency at 25 to the dollar from 1984 until July 2, 1997, when the country was stung by the Asian financial crisis. The baht was floated and halved in value, reaching its lowest rate of 56 to the dollar in January 1998. It has since risen to about 34 per dollar.






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