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Bangkok Post
Bangkok Post
Business

Economic growth slowed in Q4: economists

A worker walks past centrifuges at the VA Latex rubber factory in southern Trang province. (Reuters photo)

BENGALURU: Thailand's economic growth probably slowed in the fourth quarter as reduced exports and factory activity, together with tightening monetary conditions, curbed private consumption, a Reuters poll of economists found.

Growth in Southeast Asia's second-largest economy was estimated at 3.5% year-on-year in the October-December period, down from 4.5% in the prior quarter, according to the median forecast of 19 economists polled between Feb 9 and 15.

The National Economic and Social Development Council will release the official GDP figures on Friday.

On a quarterly basis, gross domestic product (GDP) was forecast to have grown a seasonally adjusted 0.5%, a significant slowdown from 1.2% in the previous quarter, the survey showed.

Forecasts ranged from -0.3% to 1.6%, highlighting uncertainty surrounding the growth outlook. The data will be released on Feb. 17.

"Challenging global external environment likely posed headwinds to the manufacturing sector and goods exports, and weakness would likely be reflected," wrote Chua Han Teng, economist at DBS.

"Overall, Thailand's economic recovery is gaining traction, and China's earlier-than-expected reopening should provide further growth impetus in 2023.

Exports contracted more than expected and factory output declined sharply in December.

The tourism-dependent economy, slowly recovering from the Covid-19 pandemic, is expected to gain traction with a continued recovery in tourism as Chinese visitors return.

This would contribute to a broader-based improvement in tourism employment, which accounts for a significant share of total employment and about 12% of GDP.

The economy was expected to grow 3.7% this year and 3.8% in 2024, before slowing to 3.2% in 2025, a separate Reuters poll found.

"China's border reopening should provide renewed impetus for Thailand's recovery in 2023 and help offset some of the weakness from the goods export sector," said Bansi Madhavani, senior economist at ANZ.

"Firmer growth will in turn give the Bank of Thailand (BoT) some scope to continue its path of gradual monetary policy normalisation."

The BoT has raised rates by a total of 100 basis points since August to 1.50%, though the tightening cycle has been less aggressive than that of many of its peers as the country’s economic recovery has lagged other Southeast Asian nations.

A majority of economists in a Reuters poll expected the central bank to implement another modest rate hike at its policy meeting on March 29. 

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