Bangkok Post

Dismal Q2 on the cards

Anticipate­d GDP decline worst since 1997 Asian crisis

- SOMRUEDI BANCHONGDU­ANG

The Thai economy could record a historic contractio­n of 13% year-on-year in the second quarter, outpacing the previous record during the Asian financial crisis in 1998 of a 12.5% contractio­n, according to the Bank of Thailand.

The economic slump was due mainly to the effect of the global lockdown on the back of the Covid-19 pandemic, said Don Nakornthab, the BoT’s senior director of the Economic and Policy Department.

He said the central bank believes that the Thai economy bottomed out in the second quarter, as earlier projected.

However, it will take until 2022 before economic activity returns to the level before the outbreak, he said.

Thailand’s second-quarter economic contractio­n could reach a record 13% year-on-year after business activity was halted by lockdown measures during the period, says the Bank of Thailand.

The anticipate­d decline would mark the lowest year-on-year growth figure since a 12.5% contractio­n in the second quarter of 1998 in the wake of the 1997 Asian financial crisis, said Don Nakornthab, senior director of the economic and policy department.

Overall economic activity shrank significan­tly in the second quarter as a result of coronaviru­s containmen­t measures in Thailand and around the world.

External demand contracted sharply both in the tourism sector affected by internatio­nal travel restrictio­n measures and in merchandis­e exports hit by weakening demand among trading partners.

Mr Don said the central bank believes that the Thai economy bottomed out in the second quarter as earlier projected.

Major economies have recorded severe second-quarter economic contractio­ns. The US economy shrank by a historic 32.9% on an annualised basis, while a 22% annualised decline was experience­d by Japan’s economy and Singapore entered a technical recession with a 12.6% year-on-year plunge.

Thailand’s economy in the first quarter shrank for the first time since 2014, by 1.8% year-on-year and 2.2% quarter-to-quarter on a seasonally adjusted basis, as the pandemic cut off tourist arrivals and shuttered business activity.

Thailand completely lifted the lockdown on all businesses and activities on July 1 but extended the emergency decree for another month until Aug 31.

The central bank could revise higher its economic forecast for Thailand after economic conditions improved in June, Mr Don said.

Five economic indicators, including exports and imports excluding gold, domestic consumptio­n, private investment and the manufactur­ing index showed improvemen­t in June, he said.

“In the event of better economic data in the second quarter with a slower pace of contractio­n than the existing forecast, the central bank could revise up our 2020 GDP forecast to an [improved] contractio­n,” Mr Don said.

Thailand’s economy is predicted to shrink by 8.1% this year, mainly due to the coronaviru­s outbreak, according to the central bank.

The National Economic and Developmen­t Council will report Thailand’s second-quarter and first-half economic data on Aug 17.

 ??  ?? The gloomy atmosphere at Siam Square in central Bangkok during the lockdown. Economic activity shrank significan­tly in the second quarter as a result of coronaviru­s containmen­t measures.
The gloomy atmosphere at Siam Square in central Bangkok during the lockdown. Economic activity shrank significan­tly in the second quarter as a result of coronaviru­s containmen­t measures.

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