Bangkok Post

World Bank sees two-year recovery

Group urges stronger social data

- WILLIAM HICKS

Thailand’s economy could take as long as two years to return to prepandemi­c output, says World Bank economist Arvind Nair.

“It’s not how low you go, but how quick you return to where you were before,” he said yesterday at an online seminar entitled “Thailand in the Time of Covid-19”. “We expect a twoyear recovery to return to normal economic output, but not necessaril­y growth.”

Thailand was among the worsthit economies in the region, Mr Nair said, because trade and internatio­nal tourism, two of the biggest contributo­rs to its GDP, were hit particular­ly hard by the crisis.

He said Thailand entered the crisis with adequate fiscal space as it was comfortabl­y within the recommende­d debt-to-GDP ratio and had a solid reputation for economic and fiscal management.

However, the country must effectivel­y spend its liquidity to adequately protect vulnerable families from the worst outcomes of the economic

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Thailand should invest in a social registry with data on the people who need help the most to assist in social interventi­on. FRANCESCA LAMANNA Economist, World Bank

downturn, said Mr Nair.

The World Bank estimates 8.3 million workers in Thailand have been affected by the crisis and the middle class has shrunk from 50.6% of all households to 38.4% in the first half of 2020. Over this same period the number of “less than financiall­y secure” households doubled from 7.4% to 15.7%.

He said Thailand should continue to invest in large infrastruc­ture projects such as the Eastern Economic Corridor to spur economic growth and reduce unemployme­nt. But it should also reform the system for public investment, making it more transparen­t and streamline each step in the process.

According to World Bank economist Francesca Lamanna, countries with strong social assistance programmes and social registries were more easily able to scale up public assistance during the pandemic.

“What would be important going forward for Thailand is to invest in a social registry with informatio­n on the population most in need so there can be a stronger backbone for social interventi­on,” she said.

“Countries also need to develop a stable financing scheme for social protection to sustain and finance all these programmes needed at the moment.”

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