The Borneo Post

Thai growth dips in second quarter on weak exports

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BANGKOK: Tha i land’s economic growth slowed in the three months to June, new figures released Monday showed, days after a string of bomb and arson attacks struck the country’s crucial tourism sector.

High household debt , weakening exports, slumping foreign investment and low consumer confidence have cramped growth in what for years was Southeast Asia’s f lagship economy.

A mi l itary junta seized power in 2014 vowing to end years of political instabilit­y and kickstart the lacklustre economy.

Thailand’s growth has since picked up slightly, mainly off the back of ramped- up government spending and continued tourist arrivals.

But it remains comparativ­ely low compared to its neighbours.

Figures released by the National Economic and Social Developmen­t Board showed second quarter GDP growth was up slightly at 3.5 per cent year on year.

But the seasonally adjusted quarter- on- quarter growth was 0.8 percent, a slight dip from one percent in the first quarter.

In a briefing note, Captial Economics said Thai land a l r e ady fac e s st r ong headwinds from global growth concerns and the country’s waning export competitiv­eness, adding that trend will be compounded i f pol it ical instabi l ity continues.

Last we ek ne a rly a dozen bombs exploded in popular tourist resorts in the country’s south, killing four and wounding scores more, including European tourists.

No one has cla imed responsibi­lity for the bombing spree which hit a sector that makes up around 10 percent of the economy.

“There is a signi f icant risk that the bombings prove to be the start of a new violent phase of Thailand’s long- running pol i t ica l conf lict,” Krystal Tan, an e conomi s t at Cap i t a l Economics said.

“The big picture is that concerns about pol it ical stability will persist until Thailand is able to find a lasting solution to the deep political divide between the urban elite and the poorer rural populat ion,” she added.

The kingdom has been beset by a decade of political turmoil which began when the military toppled prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra in 2006.

Ye a rs of comp e t i ng streets protests, short-lived government­s and outbreaks of violence have followed, culminatin­g in another coup in 2014 that toppled the administra­tion of Thaksin’s sister Yingluck. — AFP

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