logo
Thailand's economy teeters as political turmoil threatens recovery efforts

Thailand's economy teeters as political turmoil threatens recovery efforts

Business Times5 hours ago

[BANGKOK] Thailand's economy is already on the ropes. Consumption has remained tepid despite a government stimulus programme, few of its economic engines are firing, and uncertainty wrought by US President Donald Trump's reciprocal tariffs means that the Thai economy could grow just over 1 per cent this year.
Now, South-east Asia's second-largest economy faces a fresh challenge: a new round of political chaos that can bring down Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra or her ruling Pheu Thai party.
'We are currently in a period of economic downturn, with many issues affecting us,' Visit Limlurcha, vice chairman of the Thai Chamber of Commerce, told Reuters.
'This could make things even more complicated.'
The most significant short-term concern is the passage of a 3.78 trillion baht (S$147.9 billion) budget for the 2026 fiscal year, which starts on October 1, that must pass through parliament over the next few months. That process could get stalled if Paetongtarn, who is under siege for her handling of a festering border row with neighbouring Cambodia, dissolves parliament and triggers fresh elections.
'If parliament is dissolved before the budget is passed, the process will be delayed significantly,' said Prakit Siriwattanaket, managing director of Merchant Partners Asset Management. Thailand's economy has lagged regional peers as it struggles under high household debt and borrowing costs, and sluggish demand from China, which is also a key tourism market. It expanded 2.5 per cent last year, and growth could be further halved this year due to US tariffs, Finance Minister Pichai Chunhavajira said last month.
A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU
Friday, 8.30 am Asean Business
Business insights centering on South-east Asia's fast-growing economies.
Sign Up
Sign Up
Thailand's stock market has been the worst performing bourse in Asia so far this year, down 23.4 per cent. Industrial sentiment also hit its lowest in eight months in May, even as consumer confidence dropped to a 27-month low.
There is a clear need to press ahead with government spending, which has dropped by over 38 per cent annually during April-May 2025, OCBC economists Lavanya Venkateswaran and Jonathan Ng said in a report on Thursday, warning of a 'double whammy' for the economy if both government expenditure and exports weaken.
Amid the ongoing tumult, Paetongtarn may be able to hang on to her premiership and a coalition led by her Pheu Thai party could retain its majority, albeit in a weaker position compared with its previous grip on the parliament.
Such an arrangement will prolong political instability and raise the spectre of street protests, which have been part of previous crises and could hit one of Thailand's key remaining economic engines: tourism.
'I'm worried. I don't want the situation to cause people to take to the streets,' Thienprasit Chaiyapatranun, President of Thai Hotels Association, which represents around 1,000 hospitality establishments, told Reuters.
'If they take to the streets, it will hit tourism.' Activists – including those who have in the past agitated against Paetongtarn's father, the divisive former premier Thaksin Shinawatra – met on Friday (Jun 20) to plan a major protest next week, and demanded the prime minister's resignation. A government lacking full authority may also struggle in ongoing trade negotiations with the United States, which has threatened to impose a 36 per cent tariff rate on imports from Thailand, said Natapon Khamthakrue, an analyst at Yuanta Securities.
'The United States certainly would not want to talk to a government without full power or with few votes,' he said. Some business chambers and analysts are, nonetheless, holding out hope that a political resolution can be found quickly, minimising damage to the Thai economy, which has been rattled by multiple coups in the last eight decades, including two against governments led by the Shinawatra family.
'Although the economy is no stranger to political uncertainty,' OCBC's economists said, 'the timing could not be more inconvenient considering external headwinds.' REUTERS

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tunisian court hands 15‑year sentence to opposition figure Sahbi Atig
Tunisian court hands 15‑year sentence to opposition figure Sahbi Atig

Straits Times

time24 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

Tunisian court hands 15‑year sentence to opposition figure Sahbi Atig

FILE PHOTO: A Tunisian flag flutters outside the building of Ennahda party in Tunis, Tunisia April 18, 2023. REUTERS/Jihed Abidellaoui/File Photo TUNIS - A Tunisian court has sentenced Sahbi Atig, a senior official in Ennahda, the country's main opposition party, to 15 years in prison on charges of money laundering, his lawyer said on Friday, the latest move against opposition figures under President Kais Saied. Atig was detained in 2023, one of many opponents of Saied who have been imprisoned since the president began expanding his powers in 2021, dissolving parliament and ruling by decree in what critics have denounced as a coup. Saied has said that all his steps are legal and aimed at ending years of rampant corruption and holding accountable what he calls a corrupt elite. Atig denied the charges against him, saying they were fabricated. "The verdict aims to eliminate political opponents and lacks any credible evidence,' Atig's lawyer, Mokthar Jmaayi, told Reuters. "It is a continuation of the punishment of opponents by using the judiciary and distracting people from their real problems,' he added. The 15-year sentence was shorter than some sentences handed down recently. In April, a court sentenced a string of opposition leaders, businessmen and lawyers to prison terms of up to 66 years, on charges of conspiring. Saied has dissolved the Supreme Judicial Council and dismissed dozens of judges in 2022, raising concerns about judicial independence. The president has said he does not interfere in the judiciary and that his actions aim to purge the judiciary of corrupt judges. Most of the leaders of political parties in Tunisia are in prison, including Abir Moussi, leader of the Free Constitutional Party, and Rached Ghannouchi, the head of Ennahda - two of Saied's most prominent opponents. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

US Fed official says central bank can cut rates as soon as July
US Fed official says central bank can cut rates as soon as July

CNA

time26 minutes ago

  • CNA

US Fed official says central bank can cut rates as soon as July

WASHINGTON: A US Federal Reserve official said Friday (Jun 20) that the central bank could cut interest rates as early as July, after policymakers this week kept rates unchanged for a fourth straight meeting. "We can start the process of bringing rates down, and then if there's some big shock due to maybe the Middle East conflict, we can pause," Fed governor Christopher Waller told CNBC in an interview. "I think we're in that position that we could do this, and as early as July," he added. The Fed has held the benchmark lending rate steady at a range between 4.25 per cent and 4.50 per cent since the start of the year, despite President Donald Trump repeatedly urging the independent central bank for rate reductions. Fed Chair Jerome Powell said Wednesday that the bank would make smarter decisions if it waited to understand how Trump's tariffs impact the world's biggest economy, expecting to learn more over the summer. "I think you'd want to start slow," Waller said on CNBC. "But start the process, that's the key thing." He argued that central banks should "look through tariff effects on inflation" and focus instead on the underlying trend in price increases. Waller added that even if tariffs impacted costs, he anticipates this to be a "one-off level effect" that should not cause persistent inflation. His comments come as Fed policymakers appear increasingly divided on whether they can cut rates at all this year. Powell noted Wednesday that the tariffs' effects on inflation could be one-off or persistent, saying officials are "well-positioned to wait to learn more" before considering interest rate changes. On Trump's recent remarks that slashing rates was a way for the country to pay less interest on debt, Waller told CNBC it was the job of Congress and the Treasury Department to ensure a sustainable fiscal situation. Referring to the Fed, Waller said: "Our mandate from Congress tells us to worry about unemployment and price stability, and that's what we're doing."

Spanish police enter ruling party HQ in corruption probe
Spanish police enter ruling party HQ in corruption probe

Straits Times

time39 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

Spanish police enter ruling party HQ in corruption probe

Members of the media stand outside the headquarters of the Socialist Party, as Spanish police carry out a search inside as part of a graft case involving senior party members, in Madrid, Spain, June 20, 2025. REUTERS/Albert Gea Law enforcement members of Central Operative Unit (UCO) leave with bags, outside the Socialist Party headquarters, during a search as part of a graft case involving senior party members, in Madrid, Spain, June 20, 2025. REUTERS/Albert Gea Members of the media surround a car, after law enforcement members of Central Operative Unit (UCO) got into the car, outside the Socialist Party headquarters, during a search as part of a graft case involving senior party members, in Madrid, Spain, June 20, 2025. REUTERS/Albert Gea A general view of the Socialist Party headquarters, as Spanish police carry out a search inside as part of a graft case involving senior party members, in Madrid, Spain, June 20, 2025. REUTERS/Albert Gea MADRID - Spanish police entered the headquarters of the ruling Socialist Party on Friday to copy the emails of ex-senior party official Santos Cerdan, whose resignation amid a widening graft probe last week triggered a severe political crisis. Judge Leopoldo Puente, who is investigating allegations against Cerdan and former Transport Minister Jose Luis Abalos, had ordered that the party let the plainclothes officers access its premises, although the Guardia Civil police and government officials said the move did not amount to a raid or searches. Government spokesperson Pilar Alegria and Transport Minister Oscar Puente also confirmed a similar visit to the ministry's roads department. The resignation of Cerdan, a close ally of Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, on June 12, and subsequent revelations of potential misconduct, have destabilised the minority governing coalition. Sanchez has apologised publicly but rejected the opposition's calls for his resignation. In a tense grilling in parliament on Wednesday, he declined to say whether his name could crop up in the investigation. The Cerdan case is the latest and most severe of a series of scandals that has left Sanchez having to fend off calls from opponents for snap elections. Cerdan resigned from his seat in parliament and his post in the Socialist Party after a police report was sent to the judge. The report, seen by Reuters, provided transcripts of recordings of Cerdan, Abalos and the latter's former assistant Koldo Garcia discussing alleged kickbacks. Cerdan "appeared to be the person in charge of taking those alleged payments," the police wrote in the report. He has publicly denied any wrongdoing. The judge also asked the police to pore over bank accounts held by Cerdan, companies which allegedly paid bribes and five entrepreneurs. Around 500 bank accounts will be analysed, according to the writ. He also ordered state-owned railway infrastructure operator Adif and the transport ministry's roads department to hand over files over public works that were questioned in a preliminary police report. Abalos and Garcia will testify before the judge next week, while Cerdan will appear on June 30. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store