After the Democrats were able to form a government in 2008, Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva appointed Korn as finance minister. Korn's tenure was focused on responding to the
2008 financial crisis. As finance minister, Korn designed a stimulus package called
Thai Khem Kaeng (
Thai: แผนปฎิบัติการไทยเข้มแข็ง). This package was split into two parts: a 117-billion
baht stimulus package initiated in January 2009 and a second stimulus package valued at over 1.4 trillion baht in 2010–2012. Most of the funds were spent improving infrastructure in Thailand, especially irrigation and transportation, public health, education, and tourism. Thailand experienced the second fastest recovery from the recession in the world, with the economy soon growing at 7.8 percent and exports growing at 28.5 percent. Korn focused on policies that addressed social inequality and poverty. He pushed through a bill in the Thai cabinet in April 2010 on land and building tax (
property tax), part of a plan to overhaul the country's tax structure as the first step to achieving a balanced budget. Korn also helped refinance
loan shark debt for over 500,000 Thais, many of whom were being charged more than 100% per annum interest on their loans. As then Chair of the
ASEAN Finance Ministers' meetings in 2009, Korn helped create the
Chiang Mai Initiative Multilateralization (CMIM), a regional foreign reserve pool to remedy currency flow shortages. In January 2010, Korn was named "Finance Minister of the Year 2010", both globally and for the Asia Pacific region by
The Banker magazine of the
Financial Times. The magazine complimented the Thai minister on his "financial management skills as he assumed the finance ministerial position in Thailand amid the economic stagnation". He was also given credit for his contributions to promote and enhance financial and economic cooperation in ASEAN. Korn is the only Thai to have this award globally. == Subsequent political career in the Democrat Party (2011–2019) ==