Thai Parliament Passes $93 Billion Budget as Growth Outlook Dims

Bookmark

Thailand’s parliament approved the nation’s annual budget that seeks to ramp up spending on tackling the Covid-19 outbreak while slashing outlays for defense and education with the government revenue coming under pressure from a worsening growth outlook.

The 3.1 trillion baht ($93 billion) spending plan for the fiscal year starting Oct. 1 received the backing of 257 lawmakers. A total of 189 voted against it and four abstained after a four-day debate, according to the results of a parliamentary voting on Sunday. The budget outlay is 5.8% less than the 3.29 trillion baht for this year and pegs the budget deficit at 700 billion baht.

The passage of the budget came amid growing criticisms and public protests against the government’s handling of the pandemic that has seen cases surpass 1 million on Friday with fatalities nearing 9,000. Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-Ocha and five other ministers are set to face no-confidence votes early next month with the opposition parties pressing for censure debates to highlight the government’s failure.

Outlays for various ministries, including defense, education and finance, were reduced to set aside more money to contain the outbreak and speed up economic recovery. Thailand’s central bank governor this week called for an additional 1 trillion baht in government spending to counter the blow to the economy from the pandemic.

A relentless surge of infections fueled by the more contagious delta variant has forced the government to extend strict curbs for regions that are home to more than 40% of Thailand’s population and make up more than three quarters of its economy. Earlier this week, the nation’s main economic planning body cut this year’s growth forecast to a range of 0.7%-1.2%, down from 1.5%-2.5% predicted in May.

Anti-government protesters have also returned to the streets in near-daily gatherings in Bangkok in recent weeks to demand Prayuth’s resignation. They accused the government of mismanaging the containment efforts and the vaccination rollout, which has seen less than 8% of the population fully inoculated.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.