Thailand expects less than 40 million people to sign up for its flagship digital wallet handout scheme, with the first phase set to be distributed to 14.5 million vulnerable people from Sept. 25, a finance ministry official said on Monday, Reuters reported. The government has planned to give away 450 billion baht ($13.6 billion) to 45 million people under its stimulus programme, which will see 10,000 baht ($300) transferred to each person who registers to spend in their localities within six months.
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Chinese authorities have banned the accounting firm PwC for six months and fined it over 400 million yuan ($56.4 million) over its involvement in the audit of collapsed property developer Evergrande, the Associated Press reported. The punishment is the heaviest yet for international accounting firms operating in China. PwC will be banned from signing off on any financial results in the country for six months. Already, it has been losing clients.
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New bank lending in China jumped less than expected in August after hitting a 15-year low in July, as the central bank keeps policy accommodative and pledges to roll out more supportive measures to bolster a fragile economic recovery, Reuters reported. Chinese banks extended 900 billion yuan ($126.86 billion) in new yuan loans in August, up 246% from July but short of analyst expectations, data released by the People's Bank of China showed on Friday.
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India Inflation Rose Slightly in August

Inflation in India ticked up a little in August, likely keeping policymakers at the country’s central bank on their toes as they plot whether to cut interest rates in the coming months, the Wall Street Journal reported. The consumer price index increased 3.65% on year in August, compared with 3.6% in the prior month, Indian government figures showed on Thursday. That compared with economists’ expectations of 3.5% from a FactSet poll. July’s level was the lowest since August 2019, before the pandemic and more recent geopolitical pressures.
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China has for years had one of the lowest retirement ages among major economies. Men started life’s next chapter at age 60, while women did so as early as 50. But now, China’s next generation will have to work longer, the Wall Street Journal reported. To address looming pension-system shortfalls and economic strains, Beijing on Friday moved to gradually raise the statutory retirement age to 63 for men and 55 for blue-collar women. The retirement age for other women will increase to 58 from 55.
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Russian hacker groups briefly disrupted Taiwanese financial platforms including the stock exchange and lender Mega Financial Holding Co.’s website, exposing the vulnerability of the island to foreign cyberattacks, Bloomberg News reported. Two groups that go by the handles “NoName057” and “RipperSec” on Telegram swamped targeted websites with a so-called Distributed Denial of Service attack, which caused unstable connection issues for the platforms Thursday afternoon, the Ministry of Digital Affairs said Friday.
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Hui Ka Yan, the chairman of China Evergrande Group - the company at the centre of the country's property sector crisis - has been moved to a special detention centre in Shenzhen, Reuters reported. Hui, 65, has not been seen in public since he was taken away by Chinese authorities a year ago and his current whereabouts have not been previously reported. After China's securities regulator found Evergrande's flagship unit had inflated earnings and committed securities fraud, Hui was fined $6.6 million in March and barred from the securities market for life.
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Bank of Japan policy board member Naoki Tamura said the central bank should raise interest rates to around 1% in the near future, fueling expectations of several rate increases, the Wall Street Journal reported. In a speech Thursday to business leaders in the western prefecture of Okayama, Tamura said short-term interest rates should be raised to at least around 1% in the latter half of the bank’s projection period. Japan’s neutral interest rate is likely around that level, he said.
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Pakistan cut its benchmark interest rate for a third consecutive meeting as slowing inflation gave policymakers space to revive economic growth, Bloomberg News reported. The State Bank of Pakistan lowered the target rate by 200 basis points to 17.5%, according to a statement. “The MPC assessed the real interest rate to still be adequately positive to bring inflation down to the medium-term target of 5%–7% and help ensure macroeconomic stability,” the central bank said.
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