Economy News

Discover the latest updates on Thailand’s economy with our in-depth coverage of breaking news, developments, and events shaping its financial landscape. Stay informed and ahead of the curve with our thorough analysis and insights into the business sectors, financial markets, and government policies of Thailand.

Stay ahead in Thailand’s dynamic and constantly evolving economy by subscribing to our newsletter and following us on social media.

  • Sponsored

    Top 10 reasons for expats to get a comprehensive health insurance in Thailand

    Moving to Thailand offers plenty of excitement and adventure, but the local healthcare system can be complex to navigate as an expat. From unique health risks to high costs at private hospitals, having a comprehensive health insurance plan is essential....

  • Permanent residency, changes to quarantine period – Government mulls strategies to revive economy

    Permanent residency, changes to quarantine period – Government mulls strategies to revive economy

    “The government is considering offering permanent residency to those buying condos in the Kingdom.” Energy minister and deputy PM Supattanapong Punmeechaow has outlined a number of strategies the government hopes will help the Thai economy recover from the Covid-19 fallout. Permanent residency for some condo purchases, changes to the mandatory quarantine and incentives for foreign investment are all under discussion.…

  • Thailand at the crossroads. The anti-government protesters vs Thai establishment – VIDEO

    Thailand at the crossroads. The anti-government protesters vs Thai establishment – VIDEO

    Click to watch the video… This video provides some background of the protests and their challenge ahead. They are battling a deeply entrenched “establishment”, including the Army, the government, the Bangkok ‘elite’ and years of conservative traditions protecting the revered Thai monarchy. The protesters are young, educated and motivated. The government controls the levers of power. What will happen? Like…

  • “Protests could affect the economy” – Bank of Thailand

    “Protests could affect the economy” – Bank of Thailand

    The ongoing political protests could have a negative impact on Thailand’s already crippled economy by weakening domestic consumption and tourism even more, according to the Bank of Thailand. The bank’s newly appointed governor Settaput Suthiwart-Narueput, who started this month, says they need to keep a close watch on the situation. “Basically, the political factor is one of the uncertainties… It…

  • Phuket tax revenue plummets during pandemic – VIDEO

    Phuket tax revenue plummets during pandemic – VIDEO

    The Covid-19 pandemic led has tax revenue in Phuket to be cut in half. Border closures, banning international tourists, has caused the tax revenue for the popular island destination to plummet. From January to August, total tax receipts year on year fell by more than 46%, according to data from the Phuket Area Revenue Office, obtained by The Phuket News. In…

  • Covid-19 could lead to a crisis worse than the 1997 Asian financial crisis

    Covid-19 could lead to a crisis worse than the 1997 Asian financial crisis

    With debt relief measures set to expire this month, Thailand’s financial woes, brought on by the Covid-19 pandemic, might end up being worse that the 1997 Asian financial crisis, known in Thailand as the Tom Yam Kung crisis, according to the Bangkok Commercial Asset Management. The 1997 Asian financial crisis started in Thailand with the financial collapse of the Thai…

  • The Pattaya to Hua Hin bridge. Government discusses 900 billion baht investment.

    The Pattaya to Hua Hin bridge. Government discusses 900 billion baht investment.

    The government is looking into a so-called “Thai Bridge” that would connect Pattaya to Hua Hin, an estimated 900 billion baht investment. The project would be part of the Eastern Economic Corridor development plan aimed at improving the transportation and infrastructure in Thailand. The 900 billion baht investment is expected to take 10 years to financially implement, according to chairperson…

  • Minor International Chairman calls for major overhaul of Thailand’s ASQ

    Minor International Chairman calls for major overhaul of Thailand’s ASQ

    Minor International’s outspoken Chairman, Bill Heinecke, has penned an open letter to Thailand’s Public Health Minister, Anutin Charnvirakul. The thrust of the letter is that the current ASQ and general quarantine requirements and restrictions, is making any recovery of the country’s tourism and hospitality industry. Minor hotels have already serviced 2,500 guest as part of the Thai government’s Alternative State…

  • China’s economy expected to grow 1.6% in 2020 – World Bank

    China’s economy expected to grow 1.6% in 2020 – World Bank

    Much the world is currently seeing continuing surges of new Covid-19 cases, some countries are well into their 2nd wave. Meanwhile China is quietly getting it’s industrial engine and economy going again as new cases. In fact China’s number of ‘active cases’ has been dropping since April, and now is fewer than 200 total cases across the country. Along with…

  • Economic think tank says shopping stimulus will only help in the short-term

    Economic think tank says shopping stimulus will only help in the short-term

    The research division of Kasikorn Bank says while the government’s planned shopping stimulus has its advantages, the benefits will only be short-term. The Kasikorn Research Centre points out that the scheme, which it’s hoped will run from October 23 to December 31, will only provide a temporary boost to the economy. The stimulus measure, which is being put to the…

  • Medical chief in favour of re-opening borders, calls zero cases target unrealistic

    Medical chief in favour of re-opening borders, calls zero cases target unrealistic

    A senior Thai medical professional has confirmed he’s in favour of Thailand re-opening its borders, saying attempting to maintain zero cases of Covid-19 is “unrealistic”. Somsak Akksilp, from the Department of Medical Services, insists the country is adequately prepared in the event of a resurgence of the virus and, with no date set for vaccine availability, the country must move…

  • Thailand’s Health Ministry wants to reduce tourist quarantine to 10 days

    Thailand’s Health Ministry wants to reduce tourist quarantine to 10 days

    Thailand’s Health Ministry is seeking to reduce the mandatory quarantine period for foreign tourists, currently mandated at 14 days, to 10 days. The reduction would be assessed after one month and, if successful, quarantine could be further reduced to 7 days. However, this reduction would only apply to those arriving from countries considered “safe” from Covid-19. Those arriving from high-risk…

  • Key foreign investors could be exempt from quarantine

    Key foreign investors could be exempt from quarantine

    Key foreign investors might get to skip out on the 14 day quarantine required for travellers entering Thailand. Allowing high spending investors a free pass on the isolation period is aimed to help revive the economy after it was battered by the pandemic. The Centre for Economic Situation Administration, or CESA, is expected to discuss the proposal today. Special measures…

  • Head of economic recovery panel warns of collapse if borders not re-opened now

    Head of economic recovery panel warns of collapse if borders not re-opened now

    A businessman heading up an economic recovery panel is warning the government that unless Thailand’s borders are re-opened for the last quarter of the year, the country is headed for total economic collapse. The Bangkok Post reports that Pailin Chuchottaworn says the gradual easing of Covid restrictions in recent months is not enough, insisting the country must re-open to international…

  • Finance Ministry mulls stimulus packages to boost property sector, consumption

    Finance Ministry mulls stimulus packages to boost property sector, consumption

    The new permanent secretary at the Finance Ministry, Krisada Chinavicharana, says officials are considering additional stimulus measures to support Thailand’s property sector and to further boost consumer spending. Krisada says he plans to meet with senior officials to debate more ways to get the economy going again, as the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic continues to make itself felt. He says…

  • Thailand beaches may limit visitors until Covid-19 vaccine is available

    Thailand beaches may limit visitors until Covid-19 vaccine is available

    Beaches and national parks might not fully open to international tourists until a Covid-19 vaccine is available. Around 120 to 150 tourists departing from China are set to arrive in Phuket on October 8 after a 6 month ban on international tourists. They’ll have to go through a 14 day state quarantine, but after that, they may not be able…

  • Cabinet to approve co-payment of 3,000 baht each for 10 million consumers

    Cabinet to approve co-payment of 3,000 baht each for 10 million consumers

    In its latest round of direct economic stimulus, the Thai government is to offer a co-payment of 3,000 baht each to 10 million Thai citizens for a period of 3 months. The scheme is expected to kick off on October 23 and run up the end of the year, with the co-payment subsidising half the cost of purchases, but excluding…

  • Deputy PM says 2 years until Thailand’s economy is back to normal

    Deputy PM says 2 years until Thailand’s economy is back to normal

    It’s going to be another 2 years until Thailand’s economy is back on track, according to Deputy PM Supattanapong Punmeechaow. At least that’s the amount of time he expects it will take to get the economy back to “normal levels” from before the coronavirus pandemic. The coronavirus crisis crippled economies across the globe. The Covid-19 pandemic is already the worst…

  • Thailand’s first cancer medicine factory expected to cut drug costs in half

    Thailand’s first cancer medicine factory expected to cut drug costs in half

    The government just sealed the deal to build Thailand’s first factory to produce cancer-treating medicine and chemicals, a move that is expected to cut treatment drug costs in half. Buying imported cancer-treating drugs is expensive. Thailand spends about 21 billion baht per year on imported cancer medicine, according to Deputy PM and Public Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul. The local factory is intended…

  • 70% of Phuket’s tourism businesses are closed, many for good

    70% of Phuket’s tourism businesses are closed, many for good

    Most tourism businesses in Phuket have closed due to the Covid-19 pandemic, and they probably won’t be up and running again until foreign tourists are let back in Thailand. Phuket Governor Narong Woonciew says around 70% of tourism businesses have closed, most of them just temporarily, but some have shut down permanently. But the statistics are not quite that simple,…

  • Ministry of Labour, CP Foods to hire 8,000 graduates to help reduce unemployment

    Ministry of Labour, CP Foods to hire 8,000 graduates to help reduce unemployment

    To help reduce unemployment and boost the economy after the pandemic, 8,000 graduates will be hired by the company Charoen Pokphand Foods, known as CP Foods. Thailand’s Ministry of Labour recently signed a memorandum of agreement with the company. 4,000 of those jobs will be in Bangkok and metropolitan areas while the other 4,000 more in the upcountry. The job…

  • Struggling airlines to get reprieve through small loans, extension to fuel tax cut

    Struggling airlines to get reprieve through small loans, extension to fuel tax cut

    Airlines in Thailand are being offered a financial lifeline, as the Government Savings Bank announces soft loans for carriers left struggling as a result of the current Covid-19 ‘disruption’. Nation Thailand reports that the GSB is offering the loans over a 60 month period, with an annual interest rate of 2%. Chairman Patchara Anuntasilpa says the proposal will shortly be…

  • Phuket residents going hungry after local government assistance runs out

    Phuket residents going hungry after local government assistance runs out

    Residents in Phuket, particularly those living in and around the west coast townships, are reportedly going hungry as the government’s municipal budget to provide food has been depleted. Despite efforts to revive tourism in the area, thousands of people are still in need of donated food to survive and continue to queue up for donated food every day. A public…

  • Laid off workers ask for financial assistance after Thai Airways’ flight suspension

    Laid off workers ask for financial assistance after Thai Airways’ flight suspension

    Almost 2,600 laid off employees of the Thai Airways subsidiary company Wingspan have filed complaints with PM Prayut asking for financial assistance. The State Enterprises Workers’ Relations Confederation stated that the company had let go the employees as of September 1 due to THAI flights being suspended since the end of March this year. The complaints of the sacked workers…

  • Budget airlines ask for lifeline, no answers from PM

    Budget airlines ask for lifeline, no answers from PM

    No surprise that one of the biggest industries to suffer from the border closures and travel restrictions was the airlines. Whilst there has been a gradual reboot of domestic travel within Thailand, there is still a ‘fear’ factor and reticence to travel. And the carriers are restricted to the domestic routes and have lost an entire sector of their businesses…

  • Samui charity battles to feed island’s remaining residents

    Samui charity battles to feed island’s remaining residents

    by Ann Carter As around 2,000 Thai workers have reportedly left the island of Koh Samui due to the Covid-19 economic fallout, ‘Sisters on Samui’, the island’s largest charity is changing up the way in which to help feed those remaining residents. Keyt Topcu, co-president of SOS, says the effort involves cutting out bags as the organisation realised that they could save over 500 USD…

  • Asia Pacific’s smartphone market declines by 20% during pandemic

    Asia Pacific’s smartphone market declines by 20% during pandemic

    “The region’s smartphone market was hardest hit in the second quarter when many countries here entered lockdown mode. This was also when we started observing new trends emerging and the corresponding shifts in consumer demand for durable goods.” People are buying fewer smartphones this year. The once robust and thriving industry has been on a downward slope in the Asia…

  • Bankruptcy Court approves Thai Airways debt restructuring plan

    Bankruptcy Court approves Thai Airways debt restructuring plan

    The Central Bankruptcy Court approved Thai Airways International’s debt restructuring plan. An official says the approval is just a “tiny step” in the process estimated to take years. With the approval, the international airline company can now start discussions with debt holders. The 60 year company is reportedly facing its biggest challenge: bankruptcy during a global pandemic with international travel…

  • Bangkok expo planned to fill 1 million job vacancies

    Bangkok expo planned to fill 1 million job vacancies

    Thailand has a lot of job opportunities. About a million. The Labour Ministry is hosting an expo to connect job seekers, especially recent university graduates, with companies. For recent graduates, a new government initiative co-payment system will take care of half the salary. Job Expo Thailand 2020 will run from September 26 to 28 at Bangkok International Trade and Exhibition Centre,…

  • Source says 3,000 baht handout coming soon, PM says it’s a rumour

    Source says 3,000 baht handout coming soon, PM says it’s a rumour

    Thais are getting some extra cash … Well, maybe. Reports say a 3,000 baht cash handout scheme is in the works to help revive the economy after the pandemic, but PM Prayut Chan-o-cha told the press it’s just a rumour, saying the Thai government “does not plan cash handouts of another 3,000 baht to Thais.” An anonymous source from the…

  • 50 tonnes of dodgy durian seized and destroyed in China

    50 tonnes of dodgy durian seized and destroyed in China

    In a move that will attract thanks from 1000s of westerners, China has destroyed nearly 50 tonnes of illegally imported durian, valued around 5.5 million baht. The durians had been smuggled into China. Shiokou, a border town in Cao Bang Province in Vietnam, was where the dodgy durian was intercepted. The land port has been operating since 1792 and plays…