
Trade deal with U.S. will boost Thailand's competitiveness, confidence, minister says
The new rate is significantly lower than the 36% level announced in April and better aligned with other countries in the region.
The United States was Thailand's largest export market last year, accounting for 18.3% of total shipments, or $54.96 billion.
"The announcement of the 19% tariff rate reflects the strong friendship and close partnership between Thailand and the United States," minister Pichai Chunhavajira said on X.
"It helps maintain Thailand's competitiveness on the global stage, boosts investor confidence, and opens the door to economic growth, increased income, and new opportunities for the country," he added.
The government is fully aware of the impact on businesses and farmers and has prepared various support measures including budget allocations, soft loans, subsidies, tax incentives, and regulatory reforms, Pichai said.
The support measures will "help Thailand adapt and confidently step into the future global economy," he added.
Thailand must accelerate its adaptation and move forward in building a stable and resilient economy, ready to face the global challenges ahead, Pichai said.
Thailand's top exports to the United States last year were computers, teleprinters and telephone sets, and rubber products. Its top imports from the United States were crude oil, machinery and parts, and chemicals.
On Wednesday, the finance ministry raised its 2025 economic growth forecast slightly to 2.2% from 2.1%, based on a tariff rate of 15% to 36%. Thailand's economy expanded 2.5% last year.
Vietnam and Indonesia negotiated U.S. tariffs of 20% and 19%, respectively.
Hashtags

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


Daily Mail
25 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Reform's prison tsar 'more than happy' to open door to death penalty debate
By Reform's new prison tsar has said she is 'more than happy' to discuss MPs thoughts on the death penalty - after Nigel Farage ruled the punishment out. Vanessa Frake, the former head of security at HMP Wormwood Scrubs, was revealed yesterday as the party's adviser on crime. The 62-year-old was quizzed today on her capital punishment stance - and while she denied personally backing a change in the law, Ms Frake opened the doors to a debate. She told LBC: 'Look, I'm more than happy to discuss the death penalty… 'If you'd have asked me that question 20 years ago, I'd have said absolutely, no hesitation - I support the death penalty. 'But, you know, a lot has changed over the years with convictions being unsafe. 'And is it really a deterrent? Is it a deterrent in the United States, in the states that have the death penalty? 'No, it's not. I'd much rather those people spent whatever life they have behind bars.' The prison tsar went on to clarify she was 'open to discussion' but 'not an advocate of it (the death penalty) full-blown.' Ms Frake, who has been brought in by Reform UK to help boost their prison and justice policy, oversaw a number of notorious inmates during her time in the prison service. Among these were serial killer Rose West, Moors murderer Myra Hindley and Libertines frontman, Pete Doherty. Her comments today came despite Mr Farage previously insisting 'nothing on the death penalty will be part of party policy'. In June, he told The Sun: 'These are issues of conscience, just as the assisted dying debate will be when it comes up on Friday, just as the abortion limit. 'These are all issues of conscience. Nothing on the death penalty will be part of party policy. 'I have to say, personally, given there have been 500 quite serious miscarriages of justice in this country since the early 1970s, I don't think I could ever support it. But I understand why others take a different point of view. 'Although I do think it's quite interesting there's a younger generation coming through who seem to increasingly support the death penalty. 'And I suspect it will be back within the next decade as an issue of major national debate. Not quite yet, but it's coming. 'But, certainly, these things will not be party policy, far, far from it.' A poll from More in Common UK released in January found a majority of Brits supported reinstating the death penalty in the UK, with Millennials offering the strongest support. Three in five (58 per cent) of Millennials born between 1981 and 1986 said they believed capital punishment should be reintroduced. Reform names like David Bull - the new party chairman - have backed looking at the death penalty, as well as Lee Anderson - one of the party's five MPs - who is a long-standing supporter. The party says its focus over the summer will be on crime and immigration as bosses attempt to flesh out policy platforms. Ms Frake said Reform UK is 'refreshing' following her work under various parties over the years in the prison service. 'And I received a phone call from Reform last week asking for my opinion on prisons, the first time that anybody has ever asked me from a political party. 'I'm not saying we'll agree on everything, we probably won't, but that's politics, that's policy making. And I think that, you know, I spent 27 years in the prison service and I am greatly saddened by how things are run now. 'I feel for the prison staff who have to do a very difficult job on a daily basis in very difficult circumstances. 'Finally, somebody has asked somebody from the Prison Service who's actually lived that experience to share their knowledge, and I'm more than happy to do so.' Ms Frake said she had only been contacted by Reform about the role four days before it was announced. She said she would like to see funding for prisons restored alongside attempts to extend sentences and lock more people up. The appointment comes as Mr Farage yesterday failed to commit to banning transgender women from female prisons - after Ms Frake said the inmates should not be automatically barred. Ms Frake had argued the decisions should be made on an 'individual basis'. 'But in terms of the problems in prisons, it's a relatively small one.' A Reform spokesman later added of Ms Frake: 'An ex-prison governor... has a different opinion. That does not constitute party policy.' In the interview to mark her appointment, Ms Frake had said decisions about transgender prisoners should be made on a case-by-case basis. But she told The Times that sexual offenders may need to be held in male prisons. 'It's all about the risk assessments for me, and each has to be done on an individual basis,' she said. She added the transgender prisoners she had overseen were 'accepted' by other inmates, saying: 'People who want to just say a blanket ban clearly have never stepped foot in a prison and seen how prison runs and how risk assessments on individuals happen.' The prison tsar told LBC today the biggest lesson she had learned over the years was 'how to compartmentalise' what she saw on a daily basis. Ms Frake said: 'I looked after Rose west for about four or five months. The woman's a typical psychopath. 'You know, she has absolutely no emotional intelligence. And, you know, people who are of that ilk, they don't have it tattooed on their forehead. And that is why they are psychopaths. 'But at the end of the day, they're nobody special, they're prisoners.'


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
Zelensky ‘twice as popular as Trump in US'
Volodymyr Zelensky is twice as popular in the United States as Donald Trump, according to a recent poll. The Ukrainian leader enjoys 18 per cent net favourability, with the US president at 16 per cent net unfavourability. The Gallup poll of 1,002 people's opinions towards 14 'newsmakers' places Mr Zelensky in second place when it comes to favourability, behind the recently appointed Pope Leo XIV, the first American pontiff. Pope Leo's net favourability stands at 46 per cent. Mr Trump and Mr Zelensky's relationship has suffered a series of setbacks since the US leader took office for a second time. The US president had vowed to end the Ukraine conflict on 'day one' of his presidency, but has become increasingly frustrated with both sides as his repeated efforts to bring Russia's attacks to an end have failed. In an Oval Office meeting in February, the US president, along with JD Vance, the vice-president, pointedly criticised the Ukrainian leader and accused him of ingratitude towards the US. Favourability towards the pair has fallen along partisan lines. Mr Zelensky is seen 68 per cent net positively by Democrats and 23 per cent net negatively by Republicans, whereas Mr Trump is 91 per cent net negative among Democrats and 86 per cent net positive for Republicans. In recent weeks, Mr Trump has taken a more strident stance towards Vladimir Putin, the Russian president, stationing two nuclear submarines closer to Russia while threatening him with sanctions and tariffs. Bernie Sanders, the Vermont senator, Emmanuel Macron, the French president, and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the New York congresswoman, rank third to fifth. Only Mr Sanders has net positive popularity. Elon Musk, the Tesla CEO and former Department of Government Efficiency chief, emerged as the least popular in the survey with a -18 per cent net approval rating. Net favourability, calculated by subtracting the percentage with unfavourable views from the percentage with favourable views, is the most effective method to compare public sentiment towards more-and-less known figures, according to Gallup.


Reuters
2 hours ago
- Reuters
Novo Nordisk expands lawsuits against weight-loss drug compounders
Aug 5 (Reuters) - Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk ( opens new tab said on Tuesday it has filed 14 new lawsuits in the United States against the sale of unapproved versions of semaglutide, the main ingredient in its popular weight-loss and diabetes drugs, Wegovy and Ozempic. The new lawsuits target pharmacies and telehealth companies producing compounded versions of semaglutide "under the fake guise of personalization", Novo said, without naming the companies. Shares of major telehealth firm Hims & Hers (HIMS.N), opens new tab extended losses to fall nearly 13% in afternoon trade. It had earlier reported weaker-than-expected quarterly revenue. A Reuters search of legal filings found some cases filed by Novo in California dated Aug. 4 but none regarding San Francisco-based Hims. Hims was not immediately available for comment. Compounders copy brand-name medicines that are in short supply by combining, mixing or altering drug ingredients to meet demand. These companies were briefly allowed to produce hundreds of thousands of compounded doses of Novo's obesity and diabetes drugs when the Food and Drug Administration said they were in short supply. When the agency later banned the sale of these copies, Hims and Hers shifted to creating versions of semaglutide in personalized doses not accessible through the branded manufacturers. Novo's lawsuits allege that telehealth providers violate state corporate practice of medicine laws by improperly influencing doctors' decisions and steering patients toward knockoff compounded "semaglutide" under the guise of personalized medicine. In reality, these are knockoffs that have not been approved as safe and effective and are often made with illicit foreign active pharmaceutical ingredients (API), Novo said. It did not immediately respond to a Reuters query on which companies were being named in the lawsuit.