Selangor Journal
Thailand’s Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin attends a session of the ASEAN-Japan Commemorative Summit Meeting at the Hotel Okura Tokyo in Tokyo, Japan, December 17, 2023. KAZUHIRO NOGI/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

Thai PM says economy needs boost, weighs 500 bln baht handout plan’s funding options

BANGKOK, March 27 — Thai Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin has said the Thai economy faces problems and needs a boost from a signature handout scheme worth 500 billion baht (RM60 billion), for which he is weighing options for funding.

Concerns over the funding have dogged the controversial “digital wallet” scheme that entails transferring 10,000 baht (RM1,200) to 50 million Thais to spend within six months. Some experts have called it fiscally irresponsible.

The government said this week it expected to distribute the money in the fourth quarter of the year, delaying it beyond a previous target of May.

Srettha said the government had assigned the Finance Ministry and the Budget Bureau to consider possible funding sources for the scheme, in addition to a borrowing bill.

“The economy has problems, and we have to boost it as growth has been low over the past ten years,” he said today.

The economy unexpectedly shrank in the final quarter of 2023, with full-year growth at 1.9 per cent, less than 2.5 per cent growth in 2022.

The state planning agency has cut its 2024 growth outlook to between 2.2 per cent and 3.2 per cent from the 2.7 per cent to 3.7 per cent earlier projected.

Srettha said the funding source would be discussed at the next meeting on April 10, during which details of the plan would be finalised.

It is expected that the government could finance the scheme with the fiscal budget. The budget for the 2024 fiscal year was approved in the past few days by the lower and upper houses.

The government has tried to seek a borrowing bill to finance the handout programme but faced difficulty justifying the legality of such a move that would normally be valid only in an economic crisis.

The Prime Minister has said the economy is in crisis and at a “critical” stage, requiring urgent stimulus measures. The central bank governor disagrees, but said the economy faced slower-than-expected growth and structural issues.

— Reuters

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