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Slow economic growth, lack of foreign investment are major challenges


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Thailand’s biggest economic challenge is that its economy has been growing at slower pace, about 3% per annum, than Malaysia and China, at about 5% annually, because it lacks the ability to attract foreign investors, according to Dr. Kobsak Pootrakool, executive vice president of the Bangkok Bank and a respected economist, in an exclusive interview with Thai PBS.

 

If the slow growth persists much longer, Thailand will lose the status of being the economic leader in the region, which would be a big problem, but not an economic crisis like the “tom yum kung” debacle in 1997, he said.

 

Foreign investment in Thailand today is much less than before the 1997 crisis, due to excessive red tape, which many investors find to be an obstacle to investment and, more importantly, Thailand has fewer free trade agreements than its neighbours, like Vietnam.

 

He said Thailand used to be the leader in Southeast Asia in the production of electronics but, today, it has lost that status to Vietnam and we are being left far behind.

 

The cutting of policy rates by the Bank of Thailand is not going to improve the Thai economy, although it may help the economy slightly. If the economy is to grow by 4.5% annually every year, it must be boosted by investment, production restructuring, new innovations and tourism expansion, said the economist.

 

Full story: Thai PBS 2024-02-14

 

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3 minutes ago, Eric Loh said:

Dr. Kobsak Pootrakool seem to fear mentioning the obvious that political instability caused by the continous coups scared off foreign investments. 

There has only been two coups this century, 2006 and 2014, so that's unlikely to be a major reason.

 

More probable reasons are the ones the BOT constantly refers to and are structural and core to the Thai economy. Education, training, private investment, government policies regarding business investment are the key ones. Others include a strategy for an ageing population, productivity and climate change strategy are all factors.

 

 

 

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Military_coups_in_Thailand

 

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How can expect else in a country that has no progress but only keep outdated laws and rules, culture etc instead of updating them and enter the 21st century. Labour law should be reviewed, investors laws dito, double pricing should be abolshed and so many more... Keep the country at peace instead of focus on 1 topic that has no influence for the rest of the country.

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1 hour ago, bokningar said:

Compare Thai and Vietnamese school systems, and how hard Vietnamese kids work to get good grades.

Thailand has much to learn.

Lacy people with low education that can't speak English wont attract investors.

agreed

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22 minutes ago, Srikcir said:

To be fair Thailand may be affected inadvertently by the Russian-Ukraine war, the Israeli-Iran-Syrian, various African and Japan-Russia "conflicts" that are redirecting much Western and international discretional funding.

And I suspect Thailand acting at times now like an anti-democratic country with close relationships with China, North Korea and Russia doesn't get it far in the line for international funding priority.

Agreed. The other point to remember is that Thai GDP is twice that of Vietnam, FDI's in SE Asia will probably be looking more for embryonic growth to invest in rather than established markets, which is what Thailand has become.

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5 hours ago, Mike Lister said:

There has only been two coups this century, 2006 and 2014, so that's unlikely to be a major reason.

 

the last coup has been hugely influential on all aspects of thai society. this would include many parts of the economy as well. after all they are the ones who made decisions for the last decade. 

 

the concentration of wealth here has pretty much doubled since the last coup. 

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